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Topic: What Causes A Film To Warp?
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Bill Brandenstein
Phenomenal Film Handler
Posts: 1632
From: California
Registered: Aug 2007
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posted September 20, 2013 10:58 AM
Jon, I think the pink & blue hues mentioned as coming from antihalation dyes have to do with still photography and not motion picture prints. So these pink hues aren't related to Eastman's unbeloved "MagentaScope" color fade, which seems to be completely unrelated to vinegar syndrome.
Gotta love film chemistry and all its many potential problems.
Sounds like warp is caused one or more of the following: excess humidity; improper wind; lack of a balance stripe on magnetic sound films; and vinegar syndrome, which ALL acetate film will eventually suffer from.
By the way, Maurice: I've been experimenting with some VS film with enough curl or warp to make the focus unsteady. If you store them with a snug wind turned over, and possibly even tails out, expect to see some improvement only after storing it this way for months, maybe even a year. However, if you can soak it in FilmRenew, you might only need 2-3 months to see a (temporary?) cure. After wetting or soaking for 8-12 weeks or more, wind it correctly and snug - but still very wet - and dry to open air for 2 weeks. At least that's what my early results suggest.
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