Hey everyone,

Thanks for your responses. 

Thanks for confirming that the razor blade icon in Final Cut Pro and Premiere 
most likely relates to video tape editing.  I have since also found in Lennie 
Lipton’s book 'Independent Filmmaking' an image and description of a splicing 
block for 16mm film which was designed to be used with a razor blade. 

I still can’t find a clear date anywhere for when splicers were introduced to 
cutting rooms (this information may be in a book about editing in a library i 
now can’t access!). It seems like histories of editing deal with the editors, 
films and techniques rather than the specific tools in the cutting rooms…which 
is what i’m fascinated by. 

Regards cutting film with scissors, John Burder's book ’Technique of editing 
16mm film’ states that before splicing film, it should be marked with 
chinagraph pencil and then cut with scissors, which he says are a basic item of 
cutting room equipment. He specified that brass scissors are most suitable 
because they are anti-magnetic and won’t impair the quality of magnetic 
soundtracks. It doesn’t seem like using a cutting film with a razor blade on a 
splicing block and cutting film with brass scissors were common practice 
though? Has anyone experience of either of these?

Hey Robert Withers - regards Peter Kubelka cutting with scissors if you are 
interested see below - 

Kubelka explains his artistic formation: “The material itself taught me how to 
make films.” He’s sitting at his wooden kitchen table, tackling the 35mm film 
strips with scissors and glue.
filmcomment.com/article/peter-kubelka-frame-by-frame-antiphon-adebar-arnulf-rainer/

and this https://www.bfi.org.uk/news/materiality-film-peter-kubelka 
<https://www.bfi.org.uk/news/materiality-film-peter-kubelka>

Austrian-born Peter Kubelka is a filmmaker, architect, musician, curator and 
lecturer whose work explores the understanding of film as a material and 
factual affair. His films are not available digitally and to see them on the 
big screen is a rare opportunity. The experience of seeing his films is 
spellbinding and at the same time descriptive, like seeing a tailor’s work in 
progress: film cut by hand with scissors and then glued together. For him film 
is nearer to sculpture.

All best,

Mary

> On 20 Apr 2020, at 22:09, Robert Withers <withe...@earthlink.net> wrote:


> 
> When I was working with 16mm film in the late ’60s we used two kinds of tape 
> splicers for work print:
> the ”Guillotine,” which cut with a metal side blade and the ”Rivas,” which 
> cut with a metal blade and usually cut the splicing tape with a serrated 
> plate on top of the splice in the middle of the frame. Pennebaker and maybe 
> others redesigned Rivas splicers by attaching a small razor cutter that would 
> cut the tape on the frame line, making a more-or-less ”invisible” splice. 
> I think a Guillotine splicer was used in 35mm also.
> For a permanent glue splice a ”hot splicer” was used in both 16mm and 35mm, 
> which cut a frame with a metal block. You would lose a frame with each splice 
> and the splice was visible unless used with black leader in the ”A & B roll” 
> contact printing system.
> What happened between the 1920s and the 1960s? I’ve seen that picture of 
> Elizaveta Svilova but I’m curious about Peter Kubelka. 
> Cheers,
> Robert
> 
> Robert Withers
> withe...@earthlink.net <mailto:withe...@earthlink.net>
> 
> 
> 
> 
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