Stanislav Schubert Posted September 2, 2018 Posted September 2, 2018 (edited) I with friends in Russia was tasted old France 35 mm movie camera, Andre Debrie Le Parvo model L, 1930s. First video- review in Russian and test to black and white film stock Svema M3-3. I make first video with Debrie Parvo camera on 35 mm film, film stocks test scan full HD and backstage you can see. English subtitles included! Enjoy! Edited September 2, 2018 by Stanislav Schubert 1 1
Premium Member Tyler Purcell Posted September 3, 2018 Premium Member Posted September 3, 2018 Great stuff, thanks for sharing your adventure! Do you know if the light leaks on the sides of the frame are coming from the camera or are they from the self processing?
Stanislav Schubert Posted September 3, 2018 Author Posted September 3, 2018 Light on the sides frame passes somewhere in the camera, on a blank film that has not been exposed, there is no light leaks
Premium Member Tyler Purcell Posted September 3, 2018 Premium Member Posted September 3, 2018 Ahh so its maybe the canisters the film is held in or something like that. Just seems very odd there are is so much over exposing on the sides.
Stanislav Schubert Posted September 3, 2018 Author Posted September 3, 2018 Maybe. This is camera review
Premium Member Tyler Purcell Posted September 4, 2018 Premium Member Posted September 4, 2018 Yea I saw that video too... I do think there is a pretty serious light leak in the camera somewhere. Maybe next time ya shoot, if you tape the living crap out of all the seals it may go away?
Stanislav Schubert Posted September 4, 2018 Author Posted September 4, 2018 ok. i will try). This video about manual film processing in 30m tank (b\w Svema M3-3 print film).
Premium Member Tyler Purcell Posted September 4, 2018 Premium Member Posted September 4, 2018 Nice thanks for that new video! Looks like a lot of fun! I must admit, the footage looks like it was shot in 1910 ish.
Kitae Lee Posted June 9, 2019 Posted June 9, 2019 Wonderful! If you were shooting at 24 fps ... 3 cranks per second is a tremendous challenge!
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now