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Erdwolf_TVL

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About Erdwolf_TVL

  • Birthday 05/14/1982

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    London
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    Anything and Everything Analogue ;)

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  1. A cheap-and-nasty way to achieve high-speed, low grain would be to capture the three primary colours on three separate strips of high-speed black-and-white. Like the old Technicolor systems. Perhaps Kodak can develop a stock where the silver halide grains are replaced with nanobots that are not just light- but also colour sensitive. Then, you'd have only one colour layer and grain comparable to current-day B&W.
  2. Shooting film in a subway is a bad idea... Be sure to get permission first, otherwise you will be told to move along or arrested.
  3. Looks like I'll have to start refering to stocks by their numbers, rather than their "friendly names" :) Question : Why should sample strips be kept in darkness? To my understanding, within a few seconds of ambient light, the film is saturated and no further chemical reaction takes place. Does pieces of unprocessed stock change colour over time? And what times are we talking about?
  4. I have recently ventured out with my K3 and returned to find my rubber eyepiece is missing. I still have the smaller eyepiece that came with the cam, but I would like to replace the original. Are there any "compatible" eyepiece I could buy at a shop? Or should I just dig around Ebay for spare parts?
  5. If this works out I'll be very impressed... Thanks for the feedback!
  6. A mistake I am unlikely to make again... only looking at the first two digits of a package before loading it. Fortunately, I'm still learning, so this could be considered "school fees" Question, though. Should I even bother having this processed? Perhaps underprocess this (pull-processing, right?) The colour balance I could correct digitally in telecine, but this won't do me and awful lot of good if the film is completely black...
  7. Commercial contact cleaner works nicely as well in some cases... It eats away the oxidation and lubricates the contact. This stuff is potent, so don't expect to buy it at the local convenience store. Works better on contacts with a larger, flat surface area (not spring contacts)
  8. This is the only address still in use (until August this year, I believe) kodak case postale CH-1001 lausanne switzerland Thanks for this. I guess my only concern is the film ending up in the trash. So, Kodak will send an invoice along with the processed film, worst case?
  9. What would Kodak do if a cartridge of non-process paid film arrived in an unused process envelope? With Kodachrome on the way out, are they likely to nit-pick? I have several of these envelopes laying round, the films that go with them too old to bother with. Could I buy some non-PP film and ship them off to Switzerland?
  10. As far as I am aware, Andec slit and perforate their own printing stock from bulk. I am 99.999% certain that this is Kodak stock. The results are unbelievable, imho...
  11. Slightly off topic, sorry! Pretty much everyone knows now that K16 is discontinued. But has this ever been announced officially? I see nothing to this effect on Kodak's website and internet searches are also fruitless. (Most hits are from THIS site!)
  12. Get a 4x ND filter for the camera. This works well, and is not that expensive. It really is the only option (other than shooting reversal) considering that 200 is the slowest speed film available for Super8 in Colour Neg from Kodak. About Cross-Processing, there are many articles in the Film Stocks and Processing folder of this group. You will find more information than you could possibly need on this subject.
  13. This is very useful advice. Thanks!
  14. I have today hand processed my first cartridge of Ektachrome 64T. This was done using borrowed equipment and chemicals as part of a short course that I am doing. There were two 50 foot spools inside the LOMO tank. One of the films (bottom) came out perfect. The other (top) has a 2mm think green tint along the sound-track edge. Its width is farily costant. It does not run for the entire length of the film, and seems to fade-in and fade-out completely randomly. There is nothing wrong with my camera, and I cannot think that there is something wrong with the chemicals (why did the other film develop ok?) I can also assure you that I did not load the film upside down into the spool. Any ideas what I did wrong in this case, so I can watch out for it?
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