So a couple things: Just looking for ways to improve our situation. The joys of a long throw steep angle house.
My predecessors filed our primary flat plates to what to my eye appears to be slightly over-filed vertically, something closer to 178. My best guess for their logic is that for a matted print this allows you to use the matt line without introducing any of the plate shadlow/roll-off on the top and bottom. But for a un-matted print I feel like unless we close our masking and tilt some more (past the plate lines) we are showing a bit more than 185 worth of content.
Here is what one of them looks like in our as set 185 situation without tweaking masking and tilt. Obviously just burying full-bright image in masking is not ideal either. For a matted print we will adjust per print, but for open this is our starting point generally, somewhat based on how the plate was filed.
90mm lenses for our flat setup. Century JJs. Manual side mask, motorized top. It should be stated that masking references and presets have been redone multiple times since these plates were filed, so perhaps their original masking intent was different.
185_plate_fullsize.jpg
Ignore the intensity shadow, my co-projectionist did not hold the loop out of the way of the lens when he took this photo.
Also our side legs can be "dressed" to better follow the plate line, as shown the bottoms could be teased offstage a hair.
Yes that is a big base scratch on our loop, product of people letting it rest on various parts of chassis over the years.
Separately on Lensing.
Our 185 setup uses most of our available screen height. We recently screened Clockwork Orange (166) and it became apparent in the run up that my predecessors have always used the same 90mm flat lenses and just have 166 plates that are filed to the max vertical limit for our screen/masking, somewhere closer to 178 (not too different from these 185 plates shown). Audience didn't care but we were certainly missing a sliver of intended aspect ratio on the top and bottom due to not having a set of 166 lenses. Enough that I notice when looking at the blu-ray backup.
Thoughts to improve our setup/selection? I'm tempted to relabel these 185 plates as 178/185-matted, and strike some new plates for 185 un-matted? Or would you just adjust the masking spikes and hide some more image that way?
In a perfect world our Flat lenses WOULD work for 166 too, but either approach appears to require sourcing some more lenses. Would you maximize screen usage for 185 and get other 166 lenses? Or would you look for a set that can do both and sacrifice some image size for 185?
We do have separate lenses for 133/137 fortunately, which would be well off the screen if we used our flat lenses.
Thanks for your seasoned advice!
My predecessors filed our primary flat plates to what to my eye appears to be slightly over-filed vertically, something closer to 178. My best guess for their logic is that for a matted print this allows you to use the matt line without introducing any of the plate shadlow/roll-off on the top and bottom. But for a un-matted print I feel like unless we close our masking and tilt some more (past the plate lines) we are showing a bit more than 185 worth of content.
Here is what one of them looks like in our as set 185 situation without tweaking masking and tilt. Obviously just burying full-bright image in masking is not ideal either. For a matted print we will adjust per print, but for open this is our starting point generally, somewhat based on how the plate was filed.
90mm lenses for our flat setup. Century JJs. Manual side mask, motorized top. It should be stated that masking references and presets have been redone multiple times since these plates were filed, so perhaps their original masking intent was different.
185_plate_fullsize.jpg
Ignore the intensity shadow, my co-projectionist did not hold the loop out of the way of the lens when he took this photo.
Also our side legs can be "dressed" to better follow the plate line, as shown the bottoms could be teased offstage a hair.
Yes that is a big base scratch on our loop, product of people letting it rest on various parts of chassis over the years.
Separately on Lensing.
Our 185 setup uses most of our available screen height. We recently screened Clockwork Orange (166) and it became apparent in the run up that my predecessors have always used the same 90mm flat lenses and just have 166 plates that are filed to the max vertical limit for our screen/masking, somewhere closer to 178 (not too different from these 185 plates shown). Audience didn't care but we were certainly missing a sliver of intended aspect ratio on the top and bottom due to not having a set of 166 lenses. Enough that I notice when looking at the blu-ray backup.
Thoughts to improve our setup/selection? I'm tempted to relabel these 185 plates as 178/185-matted, and strike some new plates for 185 un-matted? Or would you just adjust the masking spikes and hide some more image that way?
In a perfect world our Flat lenses WOULD work for 166 too, but either approach appears to require sourcing some more lenses. Would you maximize screen usage for 185 and get other 166 lenses? Or would you look for a set that can do both and sacrifice some image size for 185?
We do have separate lenses for 133/137 fortunately, which would be well off the screen if we used our flat lenses.
Thanks for your seasoned advice!
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