The place in Seattle has been open to doing scans with hand-manipulated 16mm 
and 35mm (such as cyanotype)  Give them a call, describe the situation.  They 
will want to inspect and evaluate it first.
Light Press
https://www.lightpress.tv/
They will also not clean it if you ask them, but as already mentioned, they 
might opt not to do it.

Spectra in North Hollywood has said that they might be open to it, but I don't 
know if they have actually done it.

Based on Academy restoration work, I infer Colorlab in Maryland might also be 
open to it.

A

On 12/7/21, 3:38 PM, "Frameworks on behalf of Jeff Kreines" 
<[email protected] on behalf of [email protected]> wrote:

    Where are you located?  Anyone with a Kinetta Archival Scanner can do it. 
The only potential problem is if the paint were to come off on the PTR rollers 
of the machine — the film would be fine but the rollers are not cheap.


    Jeff Kreines
    Kinetta
    [email protected]
    kinetta.com

    Sent from iPhone. 

    > On Dec 7, 2021, at 6:28 PM, Charles Chadwick <[email protected]> 
wrote:
    > 
    > 
    > Hi folks, 
    > 
    > I'm looking for a lab that would be comfortable transferring hand-painted 
film (painted with dr. martin's inks), scratched and taped film, to 1080p, Does 
anyone know of anyplace? I can rephotograph it, but I don't have access to an 
optical printer....rephotography would be just a camera and projector. Thanks 
for any info.
    > 
    > -charles
    > -- 
    > Frameworks mailing list
    > [email protected]
    > https://mail.film-gallery.org/mailman/listinfo/frameworks_film-gallery.org

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