] black mask on colour print film
yes exactly that’s what we did, but the mask wasn’t always 100% centered,
As a result, when zooming in, it shifted out of the center.
The person behind the camera didn’t take that too serious in the beginning, so
in some material the mask goes way out of center
yes exactly that’s what we did, but the mask wasn’t always 100% centered,
As a result, when zooming in, it shifted out of the center.
The person behind the camera didn’t take that too serious in the beginning, so
in some material the mask goes way out of center.
After seeing the first rushes we
Chanhe different Matte box for each shot?
2015-05-18 7:55 GMT-04:00 Bernd Luetzeler fi...@gmx.de:
yes exactly that’s what we did, but the mask wasn’t always 100% centered,
As a result, when zooming in, it shifted out of the center.
The person behind the camera didn’t take that too serious in
Dear Jeff, dear Scott,
thanks for your ideas!
The problem sounds so simple, but since the mask is changing from left to right
between cuts, it’s quite a tricky thing…
So masking the projector wouldn’t really work, but the fogging idea might do
the job, let’s see…
cheers
Bernd
On
Matte box on the camera shooting the original material???
--scott
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You could fog one half of the print before processing using a camera/optical
printer/contact printer with a mask added.
But since most 35mm projectors have interchangeable brass aperture plates, it
would be cheaper and simpler to make a custom plate that masks off the image.
These are
Optical? Why not do this with a contact printer, just stick a piece of
card in the gate and fog one half of the film. How sharp a line do you
need?
--scott
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