***EDIT***
Apologies for posting in this forum. How can I delete this post or move it to the Film to Digital Conversion forum?
Thanks.
Happy Father's Day.
I've been transferring some 8mm home videos from the 50s and 60s to MP4. I'm using a budget Digitnow scanner, and I'm generally happy with the results. This is my first project, so I'm a total newbie to 8mm and Super8.
For a few films that were shot in difficult lighting environments (a dark, old church, a trip to the zoo on a sunny day, or camping in the shade), the lighting is washing out the whole picture. I've spent some time tooling around DaVinci Resolve's color correction options, but so far I haven't been able to make the affected films watchable. Even adjusting the contrast and saturation have little effect.
I've attached a brief clip here of a wedding. This is a raw scan with no editing. I'm familiar with the church where it was shot, and I remember it was always very dark inside. Is there anything that can be done to make such films watchable, or is this just a consequence of the technology of the time and an amateur cameraperson with poor lighting?
As I said, I'm a newbie, so I apologize for any mistakes or silly questions.
Thanks!
Apologies for posting in this forum. How can I delete this post or move it to the Film to Digital Conversion forum?
Thanks.
Happy Father's Day.
I've been transferring some 8mm home videos from the 50s and 60s to MP4. I'm using a budget Digitnow scanner, and I'm generally happy with the results. This is my first project, so I'm a total newbie to 8mm and Super8.
For a few films that were shot in difficult lighting environments (a dark, old church, a trip to the zoo on a sunny day, or camping in the shade), the lighting is washing out the whole picture. I've spent some time tooling around DaVinci Resolve's color correction options, but so far I haven't been able to make the affected films watchable. Even adjusting the contrast and saturation have little effect.
I've attached a brief clip here of a wedding. This is a raw scan with no editing. I'm familiar with the church where it was shot, and I remember it was always very dark inside. Is there anything that can be done to make such films watchable, or is this just a consequence of the technology of the time and an amateur cameraperson with poor lighting?
As I said, I'm a newbie, so I apologize for any mistakes or silly questions.
Thanks!
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