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Daguerre-47
Known Participant
January 15, 2018
Answered

Sequence settings in PP for scanned 8mm film?

  • January 15, 2018
  • 3 replies
  • 14664 views

I have a lot of (for me) valuable  "dubble-8" films. Just got myself a simple filmscanner (Reflecta). The original film was captured in 16 f/s but the scanner outputs it in 30 f/s (Mp4). After editing I still want it to be played in 16f/s. I am also unsure about the correct frame aspect ratio. So what would be the best settings for these sequences?

Does anyone know?

Peter

    This topic has been closed for replies.
    Correct answer SAFEHARBOR11

    Hi Jeff,

    By now there are som many parameters to think about that I get all exhausted! Still it's great to get all this help.

    About the red VW microbus; yes it is the scanned film without any changes done to it.

    Thanks also to Averdal for your views and Chris for all that stuff to download!

    I'll sit down and try different things out.

    Love to hear from you again Jeff.


    I agree with Averdahl on these points:

    "Interpret Footage to change the fps from 30 to 16 and did change the Pixel Aspect Ratio from 1.333 to 1.0. "

    I don't know why, whether part of the .mp4 file or if Premiere is just assuming the 1.333 PAR since 1440x1080 is usually HDV, but yes change the PAR to 1.0 for correct aspect.

    If you don't need HD delivery and simply want to get this material onto a DVD, then you can create a PAL DV sequence, and manually change Fields to NONE - Progressive. Then add the clip to sequence (after changing PAR and frame rate). In the PAL sequence, select clip then use Scale in Adobe Motion to scale the HD clip down to fit the SD frame size. You could use Set to Frame in right-click menu, however that leaves narrow black bars on the sides. So manually scale down until it just fits on sides, and then also perhaps adjust the Y Position to move image down a bit so that none of the top is cut off (assuming top of subject is more important than bottom).

    Next, Export as MPEG-2 DVD, using the PAL DV Progressive preset. I see no reason to go with 24p, since your TV system is 25fps then just go to 25p, which Encore supports in the PAL system.

    Viewing clip in a PAL DV sequence (after modifying frame rate), the motion and speed looked fine as Averdahl said. I then tried advancing through the clip one frame at a time (right arrow) and it's interesting to see the cadence of how certain frames get repeated, yet the repeats are not apparent when playing the clip in real time.

    It seems that perhaps the original film might be pretty grainy? I'm just trying to get an idea of the actual .mp4 compression quality and perhaps your film stock is not providing the best finished example? In any case, I always do enjoy seeing old cars and fashion and such in these old 8mm films!

    As I said the other day, you got me interested now in reviving my old films. Haven't ordered a film scanner yet, but got out some VHS tapes from the 80s and 90s and captured a few of those and shared, using Canopus ADVC-300 as the analog to digital converter.

    EDIT: For NTSC editors, then 24p may be a great export option as Averdahl mentioned. This is much closer to the 16fps of 8mm film than the 29.97fps of NTSC video. When exporting MPEG-2 DVD, there is a preset for NTSC 23.976p widescreen, and just change to 4:3 before exporting. I've not tried any of this out to DVD yet, but theoretically should be a good workflow for the 8mm scans.

    Thanks

    Jeff

    3 replies

    Pedro Downunder
    Known Participant
    August 4, 2021

    Now three years old, and with many comments given, I still don't believe any answer in this thread assists me in having scanned 8 mm and Super 8mm film, and outputting the media effectively in a PAL 25 FPS format.

    I can see the value in having small gauge film digitally scanned at its native FPS speed: 16 and 18 FPS. However, with some experimentation recently done in Adobe's After Effects, I can say interpreting footage that has been scanned at 25 FPS to 18 FPS isn't too helpful, because adding or dropping frames produces ghosting or "phasing". Ideally, some sort of interpolation, or frame creation would be better, it's just that I haven't found any such software designed for Mac to do this. 

    As for reducing film grain, stabilisation, de-flickering and colour re-grading, there are filters bundled with AE to do this, and very good third party filters also available. Moreover, Topaz Labs' Video Enhance AI can produce very good upscaled video, providing you do the passes initially to improve the overal clarity of the scanned film. My concern is the speed on a Mac. That is, how to correct the unwanted "Keystone Cops" effect a small gauge film that should be seen at 18 FPS creates when scanned and played back at 25 FPS. Readers, any ideas?






    chrisw44157881
    Inspiring
    January 20, 2018

    updated auto white balance and flicker removal for ae cc 2017 and minor bug fix division by zero. 1440x1080 1.0 framerate 16 fps comp.

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    updated:

    Convert 16 fps to 24fps using smart frame blend. it only blends every 3rd frame using 50% not adobe's 25%/75% for higher quality frame conversion in AE. as optical flow doesn't work well. also, has built in scene detection for using whole frames on cuts.

    CreativeCOW

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    ->You'll never need to grade again!

    Auto Grader 3000 AE cc 2017 template - Creative COW

    Participating Frequently
    January 22, 2018

    Hi Peter,

    I downloaded the sample clips and will play with them as time allows. I did notice the extreme macroblocking compression on the red body of the VW bus. Is this clip direct from scanner and not recompressed at all? If so, that compression artifacting is disappointing.

    I had read online that one of the scanners, can't remember if Perfecta or Wolverine, was going to increase the .mp4 bitrate (reduce compression) via a firmware update.

    I do have a small bottle of Kodak film cleaning fluid that I'd purchased a LONG time ago, so that's something I could try if needed.

    Chris, thanks for posting your tools!


    Thanks

    Jeff

    Daguerre-47
    Known Participant
    January 22, 2018

    Hi Jeff,

    By now there are som many parameters to think about that I get all exhausted! Still it's great to get all this help.

    About the red VW microbus; yes it is the scanned film without any changes done to it.

    Thanks also to Averdal for your views and Chris for all that stuff to download!

    I'll sit down and try different things out.

    Love to hear from you again Jeff.

    Participating Frequently
    January 15, 2018

    Import clips into Project Bin. Multi-select them, then right-click and select Modify > Interpret Footage, then you can manually change frame rate of clip from 30fps to 16fps there.

    Next, right-click a modified clip and select New Sequence from Clip and that should get you a sequence to edit in with correct 16fps and right frame size to match clips.

    At this point, I would try to just export a short segment right away in the desired format, in order to make sure the workflow provides the desired results. How/where will the final video be viewed or distributed? If on DVD or Blu-ray, then you can NOT export at 16fps and will have to figure out at which point to change that. I'm not sure really.

    Meaning, you might still interpret as 16fps, but then edit in a 30p sequence to match delivery. Perhaps someone else has experience with this workflow, as I do not.

    Thanks

    Jeff

    Daguerre-47
    Known Participant
    January 16, 2018

    Hi Jeff!

    Thanks for your answer.

    The first paragraph you wrote worked out just as you said it would.

    Next part, though, caused me some confusion. I made a new sequence from that modyified clip but when I looked in the sequence settings, of that clip,it told me that the frame rate was not 16f/s as I had expected but 10f/s !?? Running the clip reveals motions (of people f.i.) that feels correct. Then the frame size was unaltered 16:9 when an 8mm film would be more like 4:3. Why in the world my scanner outputs the scanned film in 16:9 I don't know and there is no way of changing that. So I experimented with number of pixels in the sequence settings. I kept the hight 1080 as this is a number I'm familliar with and changed the width to 1200pixels which got me very near 4:3. This will proably affect the quality but I think that may be preferable to looking at people unnaturally short and fat.

    Then when i comes to exporting I tried MPEG2-DVD ( 25f/s) as format wich worked just fine

    Regards

    Peter

    chrisw44157881
    Inspiring
    January 20, 2018

    Hi Jeff,

    First of all, here are the links to the short sequences:

    https://www.dropbox.com/s/34e1hggxknivnj9/0012.MP4?dl=0

    https://www.dropbox.com/s/aw1705l2gu4tbfw/Sequence%2001.m2v?dl=0

    Fingers crossed it works

    The contraption you describe for cleaning film sounds very much like

    what my father had back in the 1960's named "Moviescoop" (not sure

    about the spelling here). I have read different opinions about weather

    or not you should use som cleaning detergent. So far I have only used

    "dry cleaning".

    Regards

    Peter


    i've made a bunch of tools for auto flicker, auto white balance, special film color correction(from mr. kennel). etc. they're all free. you've got some farely good contrast in there, so you can do a lot. that's pretty awesome. and yes, you'll need to stabilize. don't warp as its destructive or if you have to, do it after color correction. last question, are you going to convert to 24fps?

    auto white and flicker AE CS3 template removes all flicker and changing white balance

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    premiere neutralize exposure preset mix 18% manual exposure control

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