Hello,
This is my first post here, after lurking a while, gleaming valuable information about preferred cameras, film stocks equipment etc.
Basically i was wondering if anyone knew a lab that would perform the following service for me:
Develop and digitize super 8 negative film.
Film is scanned and each frame is saved off as a separate uncompressed image.
one frame = one image
in 8bit color depth
pixel resolution = approx. 1000 x 1360
uncompressed format (targa, tiff etc.)
and dumped on a hard drive.
(no printing to video, or mini dv)
Final delivery would be the film as a sequence of images, numbered so that they create a sequence. such as:
aliShortFilm_0001.tga
aliShortFilm_0002.tga
aliShortFilm_0003.tga etc.
Each uncompressed image at that resolution and color depth would average about 4megs. Which would come to about 5.7 gigs of drive space per minute of film (shooting at 24fps).
*Bonus points if they can scan at 10 or even 16bit color depth.
Thanks,
-Ali
------------------------
flickr.com/photos/artofali
This is my first post here, after lurking a while, gleaming valuable information about preferred cameras, film stocks equipment etc.
Basically i was wondering if anyone knew a lab that would perform the following service for me:
Develop and digitize super 8 negative film.
Film is scanned and each frame is saved off as a separate uncompressed image.
one frame = one image
in 8bit color depth
pixel resolution = approx. 1000 x 1360
uncompressed format (targa, tiff etc.)
and dumped on a hard drive.
(no printing to video, or mini dv)
Final delivery would be the film as a sequence of images, numbered so that they create a sequence. such as:
aliShortFilm_0001.tga
aliShortFilm_0002.tga
aliShortFilm_0003.tga etc.
Each uncompressed image at that resolution and color depth would average about 4megs. Which would come to about 5.7 gigs of drive space per minute of film (shooting at 24fps).
*Bonus points if they can scan at 10 or even 16bit color depth.
Thanks,
-Ali
------------------------
flickr.com/photos/artofali
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