Thank you! This is excellent. *MY EMAIL ADDRESS IS CHANGING!* Please update your contacts to: *nic...@magiklantern.com <nic...@magiklantern.com>*
Nicole Elaine Baker Peterson (she/her/they) Founder & Head Programmer, Media Monsters nic...@magiklantern.com *twitch.tv/media_monsters <http://twitch.tv/media_monsters> | **magiklantern.com <http://www.magiklantern.com/>* On Thu, Aug 26, 2021 at 8:56 PM Ugo Bo <ugobodi...@gmail.com> wrote: > Il giorno gio 26 ago 2021 alle ore 10:18 Nicole > <nic...@magiklantern.com> ha scritto: > > If you do not mind, I would very much like to see a drawing of the > method you described! > > Thank you for sharing. > > happy to share, see attached files: instructions and video. The steel > wire gizmo in front of the projector is just optional, but helps to > keep film braces not touching. > > To avoid scratches a good point is always to lube your film. But about > what to use to do it opinions are very different! > > Il giorno gio 26 ago 2021 alle ore 13:59 Julian Antos > <jul...@chicagofilmsociety.org> ha scritto: > > YMMV, but a good looper should not scratch film after even several > hundred runs. Not that it doesn't happen, but they can be made to run very > gently. > > Yes, but the Poor-Man-Looper is free (just the cost of two reels) > > But in any looper scratches happen because film is fed and pulled out > at the same speed, and every loop turns at a slightly different > rotational speed in respect to the adiacent one. So every loop always > slides against the others. Closed loop platter systems avoids this by > shaping the loops in a sort of flower shape - see here: > > https://www.maxluxitalia.com/cgi-bin/pdf/schedetecniche/piatto_kinoton_st2000.pdf > , > but not many projectionist loved it! > > cheers > Livio > -- > Frameworks mailing list > Frameworks@film-gallery.org > https://mail.film-gallery.org/mailman/listinfo/frameworks_film-gallery.org >
-- Frameworks mailing list Frameworks@film-gallery.org https://mail.film-gallery.org/mailman/listinfo/frameworks_film-gallery.org