If you're interested in recent short form - my series The Observatory,
I believe, meets your criteria. I'm not a well-represented somebody, not
sure if that matters, but my work is adding to the discussion of
non-fiction film without being too out there (or that's my motivation to
say the least).
'Crooked Beauty' and 'For Shadows' by yours truly.
Ken
www.maddancementalhealthfilmtrilogy.com
www.kenpaulrosenthal.com
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Bryan McManus wrote:
I'm not a well-represented somebody, not sure if that matters
Alas, it does. My apologies for not being clear enough in the OP. My friend's
project involves tracing 'the historical development of the documentary.' What
that means is, in short, that the works to be
All colour films can be processed in BW chemistry to get a BW image. I've not
really done much of it except for the odd time of a mistake when a colour short
end got mislabeled as BW and the film was not as ancient as your stock. Why
don't you just process a snip test of your ektachrome? You'll
I believe rocky mountain film labs in CO processes all those old ektachrome
stocks as a black and white negative. The guy that runs Rocky mountain film
labs, Steve, is very helpful and easy to talk to... I have called him in the
past and he has been very nice, helpful, and easy to talk to
I am sorry to report that Rocky Mountain Film Labs shut down about two
years back. They did lovely work and were always free to explain what
they were doing in great detail.
If I had E-6, I'd try running it through pincryptol yellow and then developing
by inspection in D-76. Otherwise I'd take
Scott,
Rocky mountain film labs is still open. They moved. I sat down and visited
with Steve for about two hours less than two months ago when I was in Colorado.
Small labs have a hard enough time as it is, please take the time to become
better informed before you spread a rumor about
Indeed!
Sent from my iPhone
On Jan 3, 2014, at 12:14 PM, Jason Wade mexicanpi...@juno.com wrote:
Scott,
Rocky mountain film labs is still open. They moved. I sat down and visited
with Steve for about two hours less than two months ago when I was in
Colorado.
Small labs have a hard
What is the story? I called them a few years back and they told me
that they were shutting down and not taking any more orders.
--scott
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Hello All,
I¹ve not seen it mentioned here, but some sad news from Chicago.
Experimental filmmaker, artist, and educator Michele (Shellie) Fleming
passed away on Monday, December 30, after a long battle with cancer.
Shellie was an extraordinary person, an accomplished filmmaker and artist,
and,
Rocky Mountain Film Lab is back in business? I though their reputation as being
quick to cash a check but it takes them several years to process film was the
reason they shut down? There are so many complaints against RMFL that I'd be
cautious about sending your film in. Try these guys:
I'm so sorry to hear this. Love to all
Sent from my iPhone
On Jan 3, 2014, at 8:37 PM, Joan Hawkins jchaw...@gmail.com wrote:
thanks for posting this Patrick-- sad news. Joan
On Fri, Jan 3, 2014 at 10:21 PM, Patrick Friel patrick.fr...@att.net wrote:
Hello All,
I’ve not seen it
HI Frameworkers.
I have a bit of a manic question. I have some rolls of color neg, fuji 400T
mostly. That I shot 1 as I like to say, layer, of images onto already,
but they were shot 2 stops under because I was going to add other layers
onto them. Well things have gotten rather crazy with other
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