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Author
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Topic: Running 70+ Year old 16mm at a Wedding
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Bruce McGee
Phenomenal Film Handler
Posts: 1776
From: Asheville, NC USA... Nowhere in Particular.
Registered: Aug 1999
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posted 10-24-2005 07:52 AM
Saturday was a big day for me. Not only did I get to see the wedding of 2 good friends, but I got to participate by running a load of OLD home movies after their reception!
I got the movies about 2 weeks before the wedding. You would not believe how chewed some of them are. Some of them are in glorious B/W, high silver, and most are in beautiful Kodachrome. The other color films were Ansco, and they were darker, and greenish. Nobody complained. I inspected every inch of all film that made it onto the final 3500' of film. Lots of home movies. Lots of bad scratches and lines looking at this stuff on my viewer. Treated them with FilmGuard after all repairs were done. Films were rewound at least 5 times during the treatments.
The projector is an Eiki 2000A xenon with 1 1/2" Simpson lens. I used this machine because I can switch from sound to silent speed by just moving a belt. Didn't worry about sound, as none of the films had it.
When the films hit the 12' screen that was rented for the occasion, everyone was watching and commenting. All of the films looked great with the FG treatment, and both families got together watching. I had a list of how the films were to be tied together before I started, and so the films went from the oldest to the newest. Someone back in the B/W films had a knack for showmanship with handmade titles, and humerous comments about the people on screen. Hats off to the filmmakers!
The show went without a hitch. I didn't pre-screen the films either. At the reel change, no, I didnt have 2 xenons, the bride and groom got up and talked about their families until I was ready.
I met the grooms 92 year old grandmother. Then I got to see her in the movies. WHAT A LOOKER in the 1950's! She has Alzheimers, but she came around for awhile seeing herself on the screen. She spoke of things that happened at the filming event, and her sons all but cried, as they remembered it all, too.
FilmGuard was the big hit of the day. Most of the films looked brand new, and even with the Eiki, the image was steady at silent speed using my 3-bladed shutter, installed in the projector for this occasion. Most of the films were well-focused, too, unlike MY home movies. I could have taken credit for the FilmGuard, but I declined.
Over the course of the day, I drank a few Vodka drinks. Kinda lost count, but they were tasty.
Just wanted to tell you how much fun I have running film.
Bruce
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