Anthony Schilling Posted November 1, 2004 Share Posted November 1, 2004 Sounds like Kodak is considering releasing Ektachrome 100D in Super 8. I think it would be a big hit, a prime choice for daylight shooting and projecting.. much more so than the 7240. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
K Borowski Posted November 1, 2004 Share Posted November 1, 2004 Hey: Lay off of 7240. It is [was] the poop. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Chris Burke Posted November 2, 2004 Share Posted November 2, 2004 yeah, but what about this Vision2 250D? Will we see that in Super 8? That would be a handy stock. :D Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Anthony Schilling Posted November 2, 2004 Author Share Posted November 2, 2004 yeah, but what about this Vision2 250D? Will we see that in Super 8? That would be a handy stock. :D <{POST_SNAPBACK}> I would rather see V2 100T before 250D and 100D before 100T Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Daniel Henriquez Ilic Posted November 2, 2004 Share Posted November 2, 2004 yeah, but what about this Vision2 250D? Will we see that in Super 8? That would be a handy stock. :D <{POST_SNAPBACK}> Can we imagine that Eastman Kodak will celebrate the 40 years of this format with full choice of premium emultions in order to give the filmmakers full versatility ? In 1998 Kodak have launched the "survellance" stcok (7274 for super 8) and in NAB 2001, Thomson was launching the Super 8 adapter for the 16mm vision gate of the Spirit Data Cine, in 2004 we saw that Kodak launched the vision2 200T and 500T in super8. All of these improvements for this gauge have demostrated good results... so it would be logical and great to have soon full choice of emultions, considering for example, Daylight for color negative & color reversal, and lower speed stock also for Tungsten and Daylight. Regards, Daniel Henriquez Ilic Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Premium Member John Pytlak RIP Posted November 2, 2004 Premium Member Share Posted November 2, 2004 Are any labs capable of E-6 processing for Super-8? With the introduction of 16mm 7285 this past summer, a few labs (Yale, Bono, ???) are gearing up for 16mm E-6, but are any ready for Super-8? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
S8 Booster Posted November 2, 2004 Share Posted November 2, 2004 (edited) The Super8 Reversal Lab in Rotterdam, The Netherlands, processes S8 & E6 as far as I know - they processed a S8 Fuji Provia F400 special batch E6 processing for me. No idea about their capacity though. http://www.super8.nl/english/e_index.htm R Edited November 2, 2004 by S8 Booster Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Matt Wells Posted November 2, 2004 Share Posted November 2, 2004 I would expect that Andec in Berlin would offer the service. Matt Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
S8 Booster Posted November 3, 2004 Share Posted November 3, 2004 I do not think so - as of yet at least - from memory I seem to recall being forwarded to the Super8 Lab in NL when I asked them to process my Provia. Not 100% sure but I think I am right. R Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Anthony Schilling Posted November 3, 2004 Author Share Posted November 3, 2004 E-6 is very clean and can be processed at home :rolleyes: I'd also imagine 100D to be quite popular in S-8, so labs may have an interest. its an amazing looking film. And from what i gather.. you could load, shoot, process, and telecine S-8 E6 reversal without even leaving the house. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Daniel Henriquez Ilic Posted November 3, 2004 Share Posted November 3, 2004 (edited) E-6 is very clean and can be processed at home :rolleyes: I'd also imagine 100D to be quite popular in S-8, so labs may have an interest. its an amazing looking film. And from what i gather.. you could load, shoot, process, and telecine S-8 E6 reversal without even leaving the house. <{POST_SNAPBACK}> I agree. Last year I developed "at home" 400 feet of super8 (E6 customized carts) with one kit of E6 Tetenal Colortec "3 baths + stabilizer" cehemicals. The critical point as always is temperature, but any film enthousiast with a base of laboratory knowledge may be able to develop that kind of film easely. (But with patience, of course). Edited November 3, 2004 by Daniel Henriquez Ilic Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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