Bryant Jansen Posted June 16, 2007 Share Posted June 16, 2007 We recently got our film back from the lab, and while reviewing our telecine we noticed that in the darkest parts of the film there is noticeable blue "noise" along the right side of the frame. The blue only seems to be in the darker areas and does not look like a flash. It was shot on an SRII, and the mag has since been fully tested and the footage came back clean. The nose comes in cycles, and even when things were shot at 60fps it looked like the same cycle rate. We have asked a few people and some say it looks like the film was dished, but I had loaded and un-loaded and do not remember dishing it at all. Any ideas on what this is? This picture is not the best example, ill try to get a better one up soon. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Kenny N Suleimanagich Posted June 16, 2007 Share Posted June 16, 2007 there was a film loader on a shoot i worked on who's hands got super sweaty when he was loading. For about 10 feet into the roll theres a bunch of blue from sweat. Could be something related? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Premium Member Chris Keth Posted June 16, 2007 Premium Member Share Posted June 16, 2007 It looks like static sparks to me. I did it once when a roll got very loose and I over tightened it so much that it "chattered." I could actually see the sparks since I was in a darkroom and not a tent. It looked about that shade of blue. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Site Sponsor Robert Houllahan Posted June 16, 2007 Site Sponsor Share Posted June 16, 2007 It looks like static sparks to me. I did it once when a roll got very loose and I over tightened it so much that it "chattered." I could actually see the sparks since I was in a darkroom and not a tent. It looked about that shade of blue. Thats a good guess it also might be a light pressure mark caused by any number of things including something in the mag or loading/bench handling. -Rob- Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bryant Jansen Posted June 16, 2007 Author Share Posted June 16, 2007 Thanks for the replies! It could very well be from tightening the film, though I only tried to tighten it enough to pick up the slack, and again it is pretty consistent throughout the entire roll. Needless to say I am going to be much more careful about downloading next time. Another odd thing about this roll was that it was lost by DHL on its way to the lab. It was supposed to be sent to Seattle and ended up in Ohio when they found it. Again, thanks for the replies. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
chuck colburn Posted June 17, 2007 Share Posted June 17, 2007 (edited) http://www.reelwavs.com/movies/christmas_v.../msleghound.wav Edited June 17, 2007 by chuck colburn Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
stephen lamb Posted June 23, 2007 Share Posted June 23, 2007 Bryant, Nothing to add about the noise, except that is pretty odd looking. just wanted to say hey and that it is nice to see more MSU'ers on this forum. hope the summer is treating all of you guys back in bozeman we Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Premium Member Ralph Keyser Posted June 26, 2007 Premium Member Share Posted June 26, 2007 Bryant, Did you only see this on the single roll? I'd agree with this being caused by physical stress on the film, although it's pretty hard to guess at the cause. I don't think you can rule out stress caused by thermal cycling as it wandered about on it's all expenses paid DHL odessy. ;) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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