This thing happened to me…
-after about 40 years of Super-8, I branched into 16mm too! I’m having a great time, but none of my accessories transfered over. From the start, I had no rewinds, no splicer, no viewer. All I had was a projector and one spare reel. One day a few months in, a couple of trailers showed up on cores: it was amazing the gymnastics we went through to get them spliced and put on a reel!
Obviously, the Kodak Pageant was never meant for editing!
(I keep doing this to myself! 8 years ago I bought a Japanese car and all of a sudden none of my wrenches fit!)
I looked into a pair of rewinds, but they were a little much for my purposes. For something I rarely use, they are pretty pricey and I’d need to clamp them to a table. At least for now, that would be my dining room table and somehow I see this becoming controversial! I want something simple, cheap and maybe even disposable if I do go the rewind route down the road.
I decided to start out simple:
.
-it was bold, direct…yet it was as if it needed something more!
.
These are lazy-susans. You’ve probably seen much larger ones used in kitchen cabinets. These are only 6 inches across. (amazon.com)
.
So now we have the beginnings of a flatbed editor. The reels are rotated by inserting the end of a paintbrush in a reel hub and spinning it around. It should be usable for putting cored film on reels, especially short ones. I think a pair of plexiglass disks with the upper one weighted could help that operation go more smoothly.
Let's call this a prototype or even proof of concept (for one thing, that board needs sanding!). It could be improved with a cranking mechanism or even motorized. At the very least, it could be refined quite a bit. (The board and nails feel just a little bit Fred Flintstone!)
I would NOT rewind a 16mm feature with this as it stands: life is too short!
.
I’m not saying this does the same job as a pair of Neumade rewinds in any way, but for about 12 bucks worth of hardware, a scrap of wood and two nails, it proved quite usable! (You have to love 16mm: a magnifying glass was all the viewer I needed!)
.
-after about 40 years of Super-8, I branched into 16mm too! I’m having a great time, but none of my accessories transfered over. From the start, I had no rewinds, no splicer, no viewer. All I had was a projector and one spare reel. One day a few months in, a couple of trailers showed up on cores: it was amazing the gymnastics we went through to get them spliced and put on a reel!
Obviously, the Kodak Pageant was never meant for editing!
(I keep doing this to myself! 8 years ago I bought a Japanese car and all of a sudden none of my wrenches fit!)
I looked into a pair of rewinds, but they were a little much for my purposes. For something I rarely use, they are pretty pricey and I’d need to clamp them to a table. At least for now, that would be my dining room table and somehow I see this becoming controversial! I want something simple, cheap and maybe even disposable if I do go the rewind route down the road.
I decided to start out simple:
.
-it was bold, direct…yet it was as if it needed something more!
.
These are lazy-susans. You’ve probably seen much larger ones used in kitchen cabinets. These are only 6 inches across. (amazon.com)
.
So now we have the beginnings of a flatbed editor. The reels are rotated by inserting the end of a paintbrush in a reel hub and spinning it around. It should be usable for putting cored film on reels, especially short ones. I think a pair of plexiglass disks with the upper one weighted could help that operation go more smoothly.
Let's call this a prototype or even proof of concept (for one thing, that board needs sanding!). It could be improved with a cranking mechanism or even motorized. At the very least, it could be refined quite a bit. (The board and nails feel just a little bit Fred Flintstone!)
I would NOT rewind a 16mm feature with this as it stands: life is too short!
.
I’m not saying this does the same job as a pair of Neumade rewinds in any way, but for about 12 bucks worth of hardware, a scrap of wood and two nails, it proved quite usable! (You have to love 16mm: a magnifying glass was all the viewer I needed!)
.
Comment