I recall reading somewhere of a technique where 8mm cine film could be copied by pointing a video camera directly towards the projector.
A sheet of paper was placed in the beam and the projected image focussed on that. The video cameras was then focussed on the back of the paper, after which the paper was removed, with the camera focus remaining locked on the same plane. The 'aerial' image could then be recorded directly by the video camera. This removed any artefacts caused by copying from an image projected onto a screen. The result was mirror-reversed but that could easily be corrected in software.
Does anyone have any more information on how this set-up works and any guidelines for camera settings?
Mike
A sheet of paper was placed in the beam and the projected image focussed on that. The video cameras was then focussed on the back of the paper, after which the paper was removed, with the camera focus remaining locked on the same plane. The 'aerial' image could then be recorded directly by the video camera. This removed any artefacts caused by copying from an image projected onto a screen. The result was mirror-reversed but that could easily be corrected in software.
Does anyone have any more information on how this set-up works and any guidelines for camera settings?
Mike
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