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Fading Memories
FYI: Colour negs from the seventies are fading badly now and slides are
fading too. Even Kodachrome. If you want to preserve your pictures then the time to start scanning is now. -- teleportation kills |
#2
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Fading Memories
On Thu, 10 Nov 2016 19:42:43 +0100, android wrote:
FYI: Colour negs from the seventies are fading badly now and slides are fading too. Even Kodachrome. If you want to preserve your pictures then the time to start scanning is now. It was too late for me 8 years ago. -- Regards, Eric Stevens |
#3
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Fading Memories
On 2016-11-10 18:42:43 +0000, android said:
FYI: Colour negs from the seventies are fading badly now and slides are fading too. Even Kodachrome. If you want to preserve your pictures then the time to start scanning is now. I recently scanned older Kodachromes than that and as long as they are dark stored they hold up. But Kodachrome fades badly when projected a lot. Ektachrome holds up better in light but not as well over time even in the dark. -- Michael |
#4
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Fading Memories
On 11/11/2016 5:42 @wiz, android wrote:
FYI: Colour negs from the seventies are fading badly now and slides are fading too. Even Kodachrome. If you want to preserve your pictures then the time to start scanning is now. My Kodachromes from the early 60s are still as good as back then. But they have not been projected a lot. Scanned, yes. A coupla times. The Agfa CT18 and CT200 slides from the 80s are ruined. Scanned them just in time! The Fujichrome slides from the 80s are fine. The Ektachrome slides from the early 80s are starting to fade but have now been safely scanned. Colour negatives, the ones with plastic(?) base, are reasonable and being scanned. The ones with celluloid(?) are a total mess now... The scans are kept in 16-bit colour tiff files, 3 copies in 3 different 2Tb USB disks. I'm actually surprised most of the film has survived so well! Now, to take care of the VHS and S-VHS tapes... |
#5
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Fading Memories
Noons Wrote in message:
On 11/11/2016 5:42 @wiz, android wrote: FYI: Colour negs from the seventies are fading badly now and slides are fading too. Even Kodachrome. If you want to preserve your pictures then the time to start scanning is now. My Kodachromes from the early 60s are still as good as back then. But they have not been projected a lot. Scanned, yes. A coupla times. The Agfa CT18 and CT200 slides from the 80s are ruined. Scanned them just in time! The Fujichrome slides from the 80s are fine. The Ektachrome slides from the early 80s are starting to fade but have now been safely scanned. Colour negatives, the ones with plastic(?) base, are reasonable and being scanned. The ones with celluloid(?) are a total mess now... The scans are kept in 16-bit colour tiff files, 3 copies in 3 different 2Tb USB disks. I'm actually surprised most of the film has survived so well! Now, to take care of the VHS and S-VHS tapes... Feel free to clue me in. I have over 300 of them with two to four movies on each... -- Bats can't tell us apart! ----Android NewsGroup Reader---- http://usenet.sinaapp.com/ |
#6
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Fading Memories
android wrote in :
Noons Wrote in message: On 11/11/2016 5:42 @wiz, android wrote: FYI: Colour negs from the seventies are fading badly now and slides are fading too. Even Kodachrome. If you want to preserve your pictures then the time to start scanning is now. My Kodachromes from the early 60s are still as good as back then. But they have not been projected a lot. Scanned, yes. A coupla times. The Agfa CT18 and CT200 slides from the 80s are ruined. Scanned them just in time! The Fujichrome slides from the 80s are fine. The Ektachrome slides from the early 80s are starting to fade but have now been safely scanned. Colour negatives, the ones with plastic(?) base, are reasonable and being scanned. The ones with celluloid(?) are a total mess now... The scans are kept in 16-bit colour tiff files, 3 copies in 3 different 2Tb USB disks. I'm actually surprised most of the film has survived so well! Now, to take care of the VHS and S-VHS tapes... Feel free to clue me in. I have over 300 of them with two to four movies on each... You are facing a lot of time, since the tapes can only play in real time. Simply buy a VHS/DVD recorder that will dub the tape to a recordable DVD. If you want to keep multiple movies on a DVD, you are done. If you want to separate the movies to one per DVD, then: 1. dub the tape to DVD (use rewritable discs so you can erase and reuse them later) 2. copy the vob files to your computers hard drive 3. use video editing program to merge the vob files into one mpeg file 4. cut and save each movie to a separate file 5. convert files to DVD format and burn to recordable DVD. |
#7
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Fading Memories
On 11/13/2016 05:05 PM, Jeff wrote:
android wrote in : Noons Wrote in message: On 11/11/2016 5:42 @wiz, android wrote: FYI: Colour negs from the seventies are fading badly now and slides are fading too. Even Kodachrome. If you want to preserve your pictures then the time to start scanning is now. My Kodachromes from the early 60s are still as good as back then. But they have not been projected a lot. Scanned, yes. A coupla times. The Agfa CT18 and CT200 slides from the 80s are ruined. Scanned them just in time! The Fujichrome slides from the 80s are fine. The Ektachrome slides from the early 80s are starting to fade but have now been safely scanned. Colour negatives, the ones with plastic(?) base, are reasonable and being scanned. The ones with celluloid(?) are a total mess now... The scans are kept in 16-bit colour tiff files, 3 copies in 3 different 2Tb USB disks. I'm actually surprised most of the film has survived so well! Now, to take care of the VHS and S-VHS tapes... Feel free to clue me in. I have over 300 of them with two to four movies on each... You are facing a lot of time, since the tapes can only play in real time. Simply buy a VHS/DVD recorder that will dub the tape to a recordable DVD. If you want to keep multiple movies on a DVD, you are done. If you want to separate the movies to one per DVD, then: 1. dub the tape to DVD (use rewritable discs so you can erase and reuse them later) 2. copy the vob files to your computers hard drive 3. use video editing program to merge the vob files into one mpeg file 4. cut and save each movie to a separate file 5. convert files to DVD format and burn to recordable DVD. But before you do that: You might want to try to download a copy of the movie (possibly a legally questionable thing to do!), and burn that to a DVD. Years ago, I started converting my Beta format movie collection to DVD, by playing the tape into a converter box into my computer, and burning the DVD. The quality was fair. I was able to find many of my movies online for download and the burned DVD was much better, due to removing a copy generation. -- Ken Hart |
#8
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Fading Memories
In article , Jeff
wrote: Now, to take care of the VHS and S-VHS tapes... Feel free to clue me in. I have over 300 of them with two to four movies on each... You are facing a lot of time, since the tapes can only play in real time. Simply buy a VHS/DVD recorder that will dub the tape to a recordable DVD. much better and far more convenient to archive them to a hard drive. |
#9
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Fading Memories
In article ,
Ken Hart wrote: On 11/13/2016 05:05 PM, Jeff wrote: android wrote in : Noons Wrote in message: On 11/11/2016 5:42 @wiz, android wrote: FYI: Colour negs from the seventies are fading badly now and slides are fading too. Even Kodachrome. If you want to preserve your pictures then the time to start scanning is now. My Kodachromes from the early 60s are still as good as back then. But they have not been projected a lot. Scanned, yes. A coupla times. The Agfa CT18 and CT200 slides from the 80s are ruined. Scanned them just in time! The Fujichrome slides from the 80s are fine. The Ektachrome slides from the early 80s are starting to fade but have now been safely scanned. Colour negatives, the ones with plastic(?) base, are reasonable and being scanned. The ones with celluloid(?) are a total mess now... The scans are kept in 16-bit colour tiff files, 3 copies in 3 different 2Tb USB disks. I'm actually surprised most of the film has survived so well! Now, to take care of the VHS and S-VHS tapes... Feel free to clue me in. I have over 300 of them with two to four movies on each... You are facing a lot of time, since the tapes can only play in real time. Simply buy a VHS/DVD recorder that will dub the tape to a recordable DVD. If you want to keep multiple movies on a DVD, you are done. If you want to separate the movies to one per DVD, then: 1. dub the tape to DVD (use rewritable discs so you can erase and reuse them later) 2. copy the vob files to your computers hard drive 3. use video editing program to merge the vob files into one mpeg file 4. cut and save each movie to a separate file 5. convert files to DVD format and burn to recordable DVD. But before you do that: You might want to try to download a copy of the movie (possibly a legally questionable thing to do!), and burn that to a DVD. Years ago, I started converting my Beta format movie collection to DVD, by playing the tape into a converter box into my computer, and burning the DVD. The quality was fair. I was able to find many of my movies online for download and the burned DVD was much better, due to removing a copy generation. Thank's for your suggestions! :-) I think that I'll stay with the tapes for a while and possibly convert them to HD later... I have not downloaded stuff that was not made available by illegitimate sources yet. -- teleportation kills |
#10
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Fading Memories
nospam wrote in
: In article , Jeff wrote: Now, to take care of the VHS and S-VHS tapes... Feel free to clue me in. I have over 300 of them with two to four movies on each... You are facing a lot of time, since the tapes can only play in real time. Simply buy a VHS/DVD recorder that will dub the tape to a recordable DVD. much better and far more convenient to archive them to a hard drive. Which was part of the process I described and you snipped. |
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