I thought movie film had this special coating, which is quite difficult to
get rid of/get developed?
Regards
Jens

Jens Bladt
Arkitekt MAA
http://hjem.get2net.dk/bladt


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Emne: New film from Kodak


Kodak has introduced a new ISO 50 color negative film that provides
excellent contrast, super-fine grain and good tolerance of over and under
expsosure. What's the catch? It's a motion picture film. Dubbed Kodak
Vision2 50D/5201/7201 it's currently available where better cinematographers
shop. Like other movie films, it's designed to transfer well to digital. We
call that scanning. Perhaps we'll see a still camera version of this stock
now that still photo processing has become quite similar to movie camera
processing in terms of digital transfer. But I doubt it. The return on
investment would probably be too small. If you really want to try it, you
might try contacting RGB on La Brea in Hollywood. They package movie film
for still camera use and process it. I haven't contacted them in years, but
in the past they didn't provide the very latest stocks.

By the way, from what I've read the cinematographers are not yet moving to
digital in droves. Digital movie cameras apparently can't take advantage of
RAW as can the still shooters, so exposure latitude suffers. Remember, a
movie camera has to be capable of recording at least 100 frames per second
when needed (although most work is shot at about 30 fps). That takes some
serious processing speed if you're shooting digital. But the newest digital
cameras are a huge improvement over the previous offerings, so it's probably
just a matter of time.
Paul


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