"Less is More": How Understanding the Process of Motion Picture Film Scanning Can Make Your Life Easier
Conference Paper
Publication Date:
2024
Citation:
"Less is More": How Understanding the Process of Motion Picture Film Scanning Can Make Your Life Easier / A. Plutino - In: Archiving Conference[s.l] : Society for Imaging Science and Technology, 2024 Apr. - pp. 23-27 (( convegno Archiving tenutosi a Washington nel 2024 [10.2352/issn.2168-3204.2024.21.1.5].
abstract:
Since the advent of the Digital Intermediate (DI) and the
Cineon system, motion picture film preservation and restoration
practices overcame an enormous change derived from the
possibility of digitizing and digitally restoring film materials.
Today, film materials are scanned using mostly commercial film
scanners, which process the frames into the Academy Color
Encoding Specification (ACES) and present proprietary LUTs of
negative-to-positive conversions, image enhancement, and color
correction.
The processing operated by scanner systems is not always
openly available. The various digitization hardware and software
can lead to different approaches and workflows in motion picture
film preservation and restoration, resulting in inconsistency among
archives and laboratories.
This work presents an overview of the main approaches and
systems used to digitize and encode motion picture film frames to
explain these systems’ potentials and limits.
Cineon system, motion picture film preservation and restoration
practices overcame an enormous change derived from the
possibility of digitizing and digitally restoring film materials.
Today, film materials are scanned using mostly commercial film
scanners, which process the frames into the Academy Color
Encoding Specification (ACES) and present proprietary LUTs of
negative-to-positive conversions, image enhancement, and color
correction.
The processing operated by scanner systems is not always
openly available. The various digitization hardware and software
can lead to different approaches and workflows in motion picture
film preservation and restoration, resulting in inconsistency among
archives and laboratories.
This work presents an overview of the main approaches and
systems used to digitize and encode motion picture film frames to
explain these systems’ potentials and limits.
IRIS type:
03 - Contributo in volume
List of contributors:
A. Plutino
Link to information sheet:
Full Text:
Book title:
Archiving Conference