Just say say we have recently viewed some old Super 8 we too in the 1970s. Bob has done an absolutely fantastic job of digitising them for us. I can not say how extremely happy we are with them. Bob we can not thank you enough. YIPPEE
Thank you for a more complete description on how you transfer film using this system. This answered a lot of my questions. I hope to be purchasing this system next week.
The Germans make a nice little machine the basic unit starts at around £40,000 but you can do 16mm as well wonder if would get enough customers though. Things change so quickly DVDs are virtually obsolete now etc.
I've been looking to replace my equipment and have been looking at the MovieStuff machine. Your video was very clear and answered all the questions that I had. I put in my order for one today with both dual 8 and 16mm scanning heads. BTW your studio looks almost the same as mine... except mine is messier LOL
Great device! Could you please share a RAW output file, I would love test it in my Video Editing Software to see the final result and Q of yhis scanner? Cheers
Dont care. This daddy is amateur and should not be considered at all,except you are western moron. This is not a studio,this is modified garage and is loooong far away from studio....
Probably this is the best film scanner, but very expensive. Woverine is poor badly made expensive garbage, I bought. Mechanical plastic part is horrible, stealing money.
The best for 35mm motion picture film? I'd guess you'd need to go to Arri or Cintel or something that scans at 5-6 K and maybe even does a wetgate and does line scanning so it doesn't jerk the sprocketholes. But those are not cheap. Those are used by the major studios for their restoration projects or DI's for regular cinema productions.
It is a Moviestuff Retroscan made in Texas, USA. Cheapest model is just over £4900. See this website moviestuff.tv/moviestuff_universal_holiday_pricing.html