There is another thread on this here somewhere.
PE
oops... didn't find it, maybe the mods can combine them.
There is another thread on this here somewhere.
PE
35mm and 16mm film - Hmm - does anyone use 16mm film anymore?
tell me which thread and I'll combine themoops... didn't find it, maybe the mods can combine them.
tell me which thread and I'll combine them
I don't know what it would take for small theatres in the small towns of the USA, and in the less developed countries of the world to switch to digital projection...
Traditional film projectors are (for all practical purposes) bullet proof, and last for generations of use, with only minor parts replacement.
35mm and 16mm film - Hmm - does anyone use 16mm film anymore? I thought that went out when 8mm was introduced - as I recall getting 16mm film processed is very expensive compared to 8mm and professional movie makers use 35mm film. For that matter, can you even get movie film processed anymore?
Last year I shot about 60,000 feet of 16mm. No kidding.
Just doing your share to keep it a viable product huh?![]()
It would be a great advantage for Kodak if photographic color print film and motion picture negative film would just be determined by packing into a 35 mm cartridge or onto a roll - as with the first Agfacolor negative materials in the 1940s, when still photo Agfacolor was the same as motion picture film.
The question remains: would it pay for Kodak to issue a new generation of photo films at a time when the print paper product lines are gradually phased out, and automated digital negative scanning and printing means a sort of the bed of Procrustes? The new generation of motion picture film is stated to have been optimized for digital conversion, which might mean that the gradation could have been optimized for the inherent limitation of sensors at high densities. Even the predecessor was capable to differentiate between 20 f-stops (although that might not have been linear over the complete range), what doesn't make me wonder: upon shooting ordinary photographic color print film (Agfa Optima 400) towards the sun on a clear sky, the surrounding halo could be clearly differentiated from the sun itself upon scanning.
It would be interesting to have Fuji Reala 500D, the first 4 layer-motion picture folm, compared to Kodak Vision 3 500T - could someone, please, get both loaded into 35 mm cartridges, shoot them with and without conversion filters at various illumination conditions, then have both ECN-2-processed, darkroom-printed, and scanned?...
My film of choice is the improved Fujicolor Superia 400 - absolutely perfect.
It would be a great advantage for Kodak if photographic color print film and motion picture negative film would just be determined by packing into a 35 mm cartridge or onto a roll
The question remains: would it pay for Kodak to issue a new generation of photo films at a time when the print paper product lines are gradually phased out, and automated digital negative scanning and printing means a sort of the bed of Procrustes?
The different processing infrastructures, if nothing else, make this unlikely -- ECN-2 and C-41 are different processes, and changing either could be a nightmare for the photofinishing industry.
That said, it is possible to shoot ECN-2 film in a still camera and get prints out of it. As PE says, the results may not be optimal, but it is possible, if you want to experiment or if a feature of a new ECN-2 film is worth the downside.
AFAIK, A research team is working now on the Vision2 advances to be put into new consumer negative films and B&W films.
PE
Hi Ron,
that is very interesting, because the improvements of Vision 2 (for example the two electron senzitization) were already implemented in some films of the professional line: Portra 800, Portra 400, Portra 160 and afaik in BW 400 CN, too. I don't know whether Ektachrome E100G and E100GX have the two electron senzitization. The Ektachromes hit the market in 2003, one year after the Vision 2 introduction.
Best regards,
Jana
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