Just imagined trying: contact printing previously made digital prints on
transparency, sized right for optical track, and generated from some source you
were already working with in your film. Set the length of them and the
repeats/cut-ups/overlaps as you like it.
Sandy McLennan
> On Sep 14,
It’s easy enough to use a real optical sound camera (assuming you have done all
the cross-mod tests and printing and developing and density tests…) and yes you
can get them for free, but I think Scott’s project is not to use a traditional
lab camera with sound stock but to use alternate and
'Scott wrote - '...to take an audio source (WAV or MP3,
or direct audio from a mic or line in) and convert it to an optical track.''
Now I get it Interesting project for sure! Those optical track
printers must be inepensive now, getting the raw stock they use seems
trickier. The film
Looks like a nice project, would love to see some outcomes Scott if you up
for sharing tings like this.
I was planning on using mmcwilliams processing scripts to print out
discrete frames onto paper (24 per second) from test audio sources that
would probably be wavs. I was then going