Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2016/03/06
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Under ideal conditions with vintage Kodachrome, 8mm movies can be really terrific. The transfer quality also has some major bearing--many conversion services just aim a video camera at the screen as the film is projected. I agree wholeheartedly about the magic of old 8mm movies. A few years ago my father's best friend found a ten-minute film shot during a business conference in 1958, when my parents had been married for four months. A frame from that film, showing my mother lounging by the pool with white sunglasses and ruby red lipstick, is now my cell phone screen image. The Bolex D8-LA is my all-time favorite Bolex camera. Small, precise, with the ability to do fades and lap dissolves. It also had a behind the lens selenium meter with a match-needle system, which was far better than most of the competition, which used crummy adaptor lenses over a fixed-focus lens with a two-blade aperture. Bolex only did things first class. I use mine from time to time, most recently this past Summer, and get great results. Unfortunately, these days Double 8 is only available in black and white, and costs about $40-50 for the film plus processing. Incidentally, the D8-LA was introduced in 1961, superseding the 1959 D-8L (which had a different meter design, no backwind capability, and lacked the built-in 5.5mm lens mask). In 1954 you could have purchased a C-8 (single lens) or B-8 (twin lens) camera. They were the same body size as the later D8-LA, but lacked a meter and the variable shutter. Best, Jim -----Original Message----- From: LUG [mailto:lug-bounces+jshulman=judgecrater.com at leica-users.org] On Behalf Of Larry Zeitlin via LUG Sent: Sunday, March 6, 2016 6:54 PM To: lug at leica-users.org Subject: [Leica] Old movies In 1954, just about the time I bought my first M series Leica, I also bought a Bolex D8-LA 8mm movie camera. If any camera could match the Leica in precision, it was the little Bolex. My wife and I got married at about the same time. While I used the Leica for serious work, I filmed our travels, our children, our hobbies, and our misadventures with the Bolex. After we viewed the short films a few times I spliced them to the end of a long roll and put them in a closet. Recently I bit the bullet and had 2400 feet of 8 mm film transferred to video discs. Last summer my wife suffered a mild stroke that affected her walking ability. This was a serious blow for a lifelong dancer and skier. As therapy she walks on a treadmill for an hour each day. To keep her from going batty I put some of the old movie discs on a TV set visible from the treadmill. And, of course, I watch them with her. I?ve got to say that old movies are magic. While it is nice to look at vintage still pictures, nothing beats seeing images move, laugh and play. Compared with modern videos, old 8 mm films are grainy and have low definition. They are only 4.5 mm wide images on aged film. Colors have faded and autofocus and auto exposure was a dream of the futire. But the pictures move. It?s almost like being there. Larry Z _______________________________________________ Leica Users Group. See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information