For reference value this is how much scanning to 4k costs in Australia from Richard at Nanolab. For record keeping he uses a Lasergraphics ScanStation which will cost you about the same price as a small house at $175k. You have to recuperate your money somehow. I'm just thinking about the cost I just paid for 100ft of Super 8 footage though.
It's not a gripe about his business but just pointing it out. Even 2.5k scans in 4:3 are $100 a roll for scans + the cost of something like Vision 3 50D being something around $50 a cartridge. I don't really know how anyone does this regularly. ECN2 processing at home is basically impossible due to the consistent temperatures that is needed for ECN2.
I guess you could save some money by using Ektachrome and processing in E6 which is a little easier to do at home, or even something black and white like Tri-X or Double X but then you're very limited by the dynamic range limitations of slide film and all the other factors involved.
Don't get me wrong, Richard's game isn't serving every person, he's using a 6.5k scanner that is capable of putting out HDR footage for professionals, on 8, 16 and 35mm with a scanner like that.
Still, there aren't that many other choices out there when you want to output 4K for YouTube even with the end consumers expectations these days on a platform like that. Oh for the days when you could buy and develop film for less than $20
For what it's worth Nanolab is pretty much the only game in town for lab options in Australia, without sending film overseas, and running the risk of it going through a high powered X-Ray machine or CT scanner.... So you pay it, knowing full well how expensive it is.
I wonder how long these kinds of prices will be sustainable though for all but the 1% of die hard film users who pay the proce regardless?
At $around 240, for 100ft of film do people realise they're paying about $2.40 for every foot of footage? And that's after you buy them film 🤣
It's not a gripe about his business but just pointing it out. Even 2.5k scans in 4:3 are $100 a roll for scans + the cost of something like Vision 3 50D being something around $50 a cartridge. I don't really know how anyone does this regularly. ECN2 processing at home is basically impossible due to the consistent temperatures that is needed for ECN2.
I guess you could save some money by using Ektachrome and processing in E6 which is a little easier to do at home, or even something black and white like Tri-X or Double X but then you're very limited by the dynamic range limitations of slide film and all the other factors involved.
Don't get me wrong, Richard's game isn't serving every person, he's using a 6.5k scanner that is capable of putting out HDR footage for professionals, on 8, 16 and 35mm with a scanner like that.
Still, there aren't that many other choices out there when you want to output 4K for YouTube even with the end consumers expectations these days on a platform like that. Oh for the days when you could buy and develop film for less than $20
For what it's worth Nanolab is pretty much the only game in town for lab options in Australia, without sending film overseas, and running the risk of it going through a high powered X-Ray machine or CT scanner.... So you pay it, knowing full well how expensive it is.
I wonder how long these kinds of prices will be sustainable though for all but the 1% of die hard film users who pay the proce regardless?
At $around 240, for 100ft of film do people realise they're paying about $2.40 for every foot of footage? And that's after you buy them film 🤣
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