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Malinko

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Posts posted by Malinko

  1. There's no need to be mean.

    This should be a forum for FRIENDLY discussion not the Royal Rumble.

     

    If I really were mean I wouldnt have taken the time to visit those websites, copy the links, paste them here and post. I do agree with you however and I wouldnt want to impinge on the pleasant atmosphere in the forums. That joke was just too obvious to pass up.

  2. I never shot Fuji, prefering to use Kodak. However some film-makers like to evoke diffrent moods inasmuch as utilizing diffrent stocks. Still some take a more wonton approach and use one single stock throughout the whole movie or sometimes careers!

     

    I am consolidating a deffinitive list of both esoteric and common processing techniqes. I think I have most methods right here;

     

    Skip Bleach/Bleach Bypass

     

    Flashing

     

    Push, Pull

     

    Baking the film or scratching (a more "esoteric" technique)

     

    Force Development

     

    Thats about it. There should be more though. Im gonna have to check up on this.

  3. My local supermarket and target has been selling kodak 110 though. I dont understand. It is still intresting to shoot 16mm still film and compare the image to the 35mm photo. The 110 cameras are fun little cameras despite the fact you can only get prints off the negative. And yes, Mr O'Brien lives Birmingham, he is making a film.

     

    thanks for taking that thing off my name! :)

  4. Heh, no my real name is Dale Suggs. I figured that so many people go under obvious fake nicknames in the forums that it would be ironic to say (not my real name). I guess it didnt go over too well. Anyway I think Kodak makes the only 110 film available, its easy to find though. I went to the Kodak website but I couldnt find any specs regarding 110 film.

     

    Chance, do you know someone named Jason O'Brien?

  5. This is topic is just a reminder that 16mm still film exists along with the cameras. Shooting tests with still film is a great way to gauge exposure levels and experimenting with lighting schemes. The film and cameras are plentiful and cheap. Kodak makes 16mm still film that is called "110" film. You can buy this film at most Targets and the like. Unlike film, there are many different types of 16mm 110 cameras, most of wich are junk. The best 16mm SLR camera is the "Pentax 110". A fun camera that has interchangeable lenses, the Pentax 110 is a real gem. It is also cheap; They typicaly sell for thirty dollars on Ebay. Check out the camera here http://www.cameraquest.com/pentx110.htm You can get the film processed at any drugstore.

     

    The Pentax 110 is the 16mm equivalent to the 35mm Pentx K1000. Both cameras are designed for practice. Though Im not sure if the 110 allows for manual controls.

     

    "System 10 lenses are so fine and so precise, that they can render a proper razor-sharp image on the 110 negative itself. They are fully capable of producing color images of outstanding quality. Not just at 8x10, but at 11" x 14" also. In terms of image quality, System 10 is the first 110 camera that can honestly be favorably compared to a 35mm SLR." Pentax Advertising, March 1979

     

     

    "Pentax 110's are fantastic little SLRs, in fact the smallest interchangeable lens SLR with TTL metering ever made. Styled like a very small 35 SLR, a body and three lenses can easily be held in the palm of your hand." Pentax

  6. I just saw "Clerks". I couldnt stop laughing. I almost suffocated!

     

    Laughing, I had an epiphany.

     

     

    This movie has inspired me to make a movie. I plan to make a movie similar to clerks. I hope I can have the same success Kevin had. The movie will kind of be like "Clerks". It's gonna be a movie about me and my friends sittin' around in the living room, playing video games, talking about pop culture and girls and stuff. I'll jot up the script in a couple days. Is it ok if my camera is crystal sync but without timecode? The Nagra has timecode but the camera doesnt though it has a quartz crystal? Will I have problems? Im also gonna shoot reversal. Its three times more to develope but thats ok. I plan on taking still shots of my lighting scheme to experiment. Lattitude is narrow. This must be festival ready.

  7. It's really just a gamble.

     

    Most times you will be alright. Depends greatly on the source.

    Most of "Brothers McMullen" was shot on recans. You just dont

    have the security if somthing goes wrong.

     

    Come to think of it "Brothers McMullen" looked pretty

    grainy didnt it? Well why did that look so grainy but a

    show like Buffy or Dawsons Creek look so sharp and sleek?

    Both shot on 16.

  8. "I am Dr Remulak"

     

    "I am Dr Remulak"

     

     

    "I am Dr Remulak"

     

     

    "I am Dr Remulak"

     

    "I am Dr Remulak"

     

    "I a

     

    Stuttering John

     

    ITS ALLRIGHT DOCTOR YOU CAN TALK TO ME!

     

    Dr Remulck rules!

  9. Hi.

     

     

     

    Its the amps that you should worry about.

    This is a similar example to how one would die

    in a head on car accident. In that situation its

    not the force that would kill you but the sudden

    deceleration.

     

    Im a c physics student down here at the community college.

     

     

    I should know. B)

  10. Heh, yeah, creativity over money.. Money is your friend.

     

    If you want it to look professional I suggest buying a simple lighting kit. I wouldnt use any practicals because they probably dont have the appropriate color temperture. I wouldnt use back light in this situation either. Be sure you have continuity. Control the dispertion and angle of the light. Beware of hard light with a video camera. I really dont know what you are shooting. Wish I could help more.

  11. Yes, the "technical stuff" is important. I would suggest learning how lamps work, the parts, the science. Also the chemical changes film undergoes to light. Learn the properties of light and lights (lamps). Learn about the diffrent lights used for film. Learn about processing and the changes film undergoes to the developer chemicals. Learn about the diffrent processing methods (cross process, skip bleach, etc). Also familiarize yourself with the brands of filters, cameras, lights, light metes. I reccomend buying a cheap spot meter.

     

    And visit the Kodak website. They'll fix you up real good.

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