Film Conversion Equipment
Film Scanning and Film Transfer Equipment Types
The type of film scanning machine used for your 8mm, Super 8 or 16mm film conversion will have as much of an impact on the quality you receive as the resolution of the scan itself will. For example, if you wanted to digitize a photograph and tried doing it two different ways. You first put the photograph down on a table and took a picture of it using your smart phone or camera. Then you took the picture and scanned it using a flatbed scanner. If you compare the two side by side on your computer it will become really obvious that the flatbed scanner produced a digital image as good as the photograph. However, the picture you took with your phone or camera does not look close to the quality of the original photograph.
The same goes for scanning your 8mm, Super 8 or 16mm film. The real-time and frame by frame machines below are using a camcorder to take a picture of your film. The motion picture film scanner and Datacine machine are scanning the film. The results will be significantly different.
Film Conversion Equipment |
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Real Time
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Frame by Frame
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Professional Film Scanners
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Equally important as resolution is the type of film transfer. There are a few basic types of film transfer processes. More than 80% of the companies out there today use a real-time transfer. Any type of real-time film transfer will result in video that is 40-50% worse than the films current condition.
The film transfer processes above are the basics types and do not include any restoration by themselves. Restoration comes in many different capabilities from color and exposure correction, to grain elimination, to stabilization
Independence Fun Facts: Nearby communities include Liberty (to the north), Blue Springs (to the west), and Grandview (to the south). Originally called Big Spring, the community of Independence was settled in the early 19th century by missionaries sent by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (Mormons) to convert the Indians living in eastern Kansas and western Missouri. Although later expelled from the area due to tension with local Missourians, the Latter-Day Saints and its offshoots gradually returned to the city, at times making Independence their headquarters. In the mid-1800s Independence was officially defined by an act of Congress as the starting point of the Oregon Trail.
Missouri Fun Facts: Missouri, the Show Me State, was admitted to the United States in 1821 as part of the Missouri Compromise. Located on the Mississippi and Missouri Rivers, the state was an important hub of transportation and commerce in early America, and the Gateway Arch in St. Louis is a monument to Missouri’s role as the “Gateway to the West.” St. Louis, Missouri, is home to the Anheuser-Busch, the maker of Budweiser beer, and boasts the largest beer-producing plant in the country.