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Topic: So I see places everywhere saying film to DVD but..
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Steve Klare
Film Guy
Posts: 7016
From: Long Island, NY, USA
Registered: Jun 2003
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posted July 18, 2010 08:10 PM
The main idea behind the service that Black and White Film Factory offers isn't just transfer of footage to film, but tranfer of digital images of all kinds to film. For example if you send them a bunch of digitally composed title frames, they'll do your titling, including some special effects that are hard to achieve.
Agreed, the price is steep: at that rate I'll stick to doing my own the old fashioned way. By the same token they have been offering this service for about five years, so it must be paying its way with somebody.
They say they can transfer digitally edited films captured on Super-8 back to Super-8 for projection. I wonder how often they are asked to do this.
This has me thinking about an old project I've had on the back burner for years now. I have a film that would be improved with some old footage I have on DVD. I could film it off the screen in real time, but I'd probably get scan bars rolling up the screen.
So I was playing around with my DVD player yesterday and I found out I could play a DVD at 1/20th speed. One of my cameras can do time lapse resulting in 20 times speed at normal projection speed. This would return the footage to full speed and place the scan bars at random places on each frame making it harder for the brain the notice them.
The images are black and white and silent so there are no audio or color issues to fight, and I only need maybe 30 seconds so it won't take forever either.
I'm not saying it won't came out awful anyway, it just seems like an interesting experiment.
B&W Film Factory is using a Kinescope:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kinescope
-------------------- All I ask is a wide screen and a projector to light her by...
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