Krasnogorsk-3 Test 2

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Uploaded by on Nov 20, 2009

This is the second test of my Krasnogorsk-3 using 16mm 200T Color Negative (Kodak Vision 2). Again, this was natural lighting shot while going to the beach to surf--I wanted to test the camera in bright daylight. For some of these shots I used a neutral density filter. I think if I filmed again in this bright of lighting I would try a polarizer and shoot with slower film.

I didn't edit this much--just did some color correction and moved a couple shots around to fit the music.

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Film & Animation

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Uploader Comments (backuprotection)

  • this looks like super16 rather than 16mm?

  • @rockangel1967 It is. I think I've mentioned this somewhere in the comment section, but 16mm single perforated film is Super 16. This is a modified Krasnogorsk 16mm camera that is able to take advantage of the extra space.

  • @backuprotection uuuh that is incorect. due all my respect but single perf. film is NOT super16. single perf was for 4:3 and a little space for the sound. bach auricon cameras had built in optical recording. but single perf can be used for 16:9 images. one just uses the additional space which was meant for the audio. again. i can be used for super16 but is originally meant for 4:3 AND optical sound.

  • @rockangel1967

    Sorry, if there was some confusion, this is what I meant:

    Super 16 is a single-perforated, motion picture film that uses the maximum image area available on conventional 16 mm film. The width of the Super 16 mm frame extends an extra 20% into the area normally occupied by the sound track. You need a modified 16 mm camera to accommodate the single perforated 16 mm film stock.

    That is the direct quote from Kodak's Motion Picture FAQ.

  • Hi..Am sunny from India. I just started to research about Cinematography. I have few questions in mind. After shooting, you have done telecine rite. Then you will get the negative. After that I need some clarification. How you transfer this video in to digital format? Is it possible to play this negative in to a tv tape or somthing?

  • @suneejn1 After you're finished shooting you will need to send the film in so that it can be processed first. Once the film is processed you can have it transferred to dv tape using the telecine process. You can play the processed film through a projector, but you must have the film transfered to a digital format before you can play it on a video system.

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  • @suneejn1 most of the film developers also provide a copy on DVD

    let me know if you need help. im a professional cinematographer (graduated at brighton film school)

  • Could you provide me the name of camera which run with super 16mm. Is there any cheap directly we can buy from comapny?

  • some of this reminds me of the end credits of that ray milland film where his eyes go all funny.

    looks pretty good actually!

  • @HooliganVanDavis Hi please look on my page, I use a K3 and another Russian camera Kinor, also I hand process-dont worry about how some of my videos look, they ofter were not colour compensated. I have some surf shots, not POV though.

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