I disagree with Jeff. You can get great results with negative film. First of 
all, you can modify the telecine transfer you get with color filters and there 
are ways to create various film looks with final cut, avid, etc. I am not 
familiar with precisely which filters or efx apps you need to do this, but its 
not that complex to get it done or try to do it yourself. Secondly if you do a 
supervised transfer they can do a lot of color alteration during the transfer. 
One of the better places to transfer super 8 to digital is 
http://www.spectrafilmandvideo.com  I can't find it again, but I saw a sample 
online of a music video shot on negative film that was gorgeous. I wrote and 
asked them which film stock it was and they said it was the Kodak 200 speed 
film, but it seemed too fine grain to be 200, so i am not sure the guy who 
wrote to me was correct. He gave me a general answer, not specific to the clip 
I asked about. Anyway, the point it, try it yourself. I know you don;t have 
money so maybe spectra is too expensive. BW is a good way to go if you feel its 
the right film to use to express your intentions. You can also get Fuji Velvia 
color transparency film which is reloaded into super 8 cassettes from Spectra 
and a few other places. Its got the potential for very rich fine grain and 
gorgeous colors, but when I used to shoot color film, I felt I had to stay away 
from sunlight as it makes the colors terrible.  Negative has more latitude.
I can


-----Original Message-----
From: Insa Langhorst <[email protected]>
To: Experimental Film Discussion List <[email protected]>
Sent: Wed, Jun 19, 2013 7:08 pm
Subject: Re: [Frameworks] Which Super8 Stock Should I Use?


Dear Jeff,


thanks for these tips, I will look into it!


Insa


On 19 Jun 2013, at 23:44, [email protected] wrote:




On Jun 19, 2013, at 5:40 PM, Insa Langhorst wrote:


The film will have a few scenes which are set at night, so I´ll need to get 
stock with different sensitivities. I have looked at the VISION2 200T Color 
Negative Super 8 Film and the VISION2 500T Color Negative Super 8 Film - are 
they any good? I am also not sure whether to get negative or reversal film.


Super-8 is a medium that was intended for reversal film.  Color negative in S8 
is usually quite ugly, and you probably could shoot 16mm for not much more 
money, with better results.  Underexposed S8 color negative can be truly 
hideous, even when scanned on a great film scanner.


However, Tri-X reversal still exists, and can be quite beautiful.  Consider B&W 
-- it's cheaper and looks better.




Jeff Kreines
Kinetta
kinetta.com
[email protected]




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Insa Langhorst
Castles Built in Sand Collective (CBiS)
http://castlesbuiltinsand.wordpress.com
(0044)(0)7789 38 22 84















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