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2021-08-26, 08:06 PM
(This post was last modified: 2021-08-26, 08:10 PM by Onti.)
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Well, if you scan full frame, you can always crop to 1.85:1 (or whatever AR you like); but if you scan cropped, it would not be possible to get back full frame, unless you scan it again... does it really worth to NOT scan full frame? I don't think so.
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What spoRv said. Also it's exciting to see the extra image.
From what I heard, some companies also scan only the 1.85:1 area because that allows them to scan it at a higher resolution due to limits imposed by the used cameras. Say you scan at 24 fps, the camera may only be able to deliver so and so many lines at that speed. So say you have 2000 lines you can get. You can then either have the entire image fit within those 2000 lines or you can use all 2000 lines for the image you actually want to use. Now, 2000 lines is more than enough either way, you could argue, but who knows what they had available years ago. I think I heard somewhere that the X-Files remaster was a 1080p scan, and that's for the entire image before cropping anything away and such. Plus, if you're not doing a 3-flash scan, you want a bit more resolution than your final delivery since the camera will use a bayer pattern, reducing the effective resolution.
Plus, today 4K remasters are all the hype. So you want to have (more than) enough to be sharp enough for a 4K image.
Anyway, none of these things are important to me personally. I'd rather have the extra image over a little bit extra sharpness. And it's not like these fan restorations are from original negatives. They're from theatrical prints which aren't all that sharp anyway.
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So, this would be the most appropriate procedure?:
1. Scan (full frame)
2. Crop to 1920x1080 (1.78:1)
3. Add black bars (1.85:1)
But if you scan a 35 mm print at 2K (2048×1080 pixels) and you must crop all the borders, the result is not smaller than the desired 1920x1080? Or when you scan at 2k the result is a higher resolution?
I thought the point of a full frame scan was to get only a film in their open matte aspect ratio and never crop afterwards to 1.78:1 or 1.85:1.
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2021-08-27, 10:32 AM
(This post was last modified: 2021-08-27, 10:33 AM by Valeyard.)
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There is one thing lost in time for 1.85:1 films though, it's that some sequences or shots could have been readjusted by the DoP or the Director when doing the final cut, but once these people are gone (or they forgot due to being busy doing films year in, year out), a straight 1.77:1 scan could be misframed in some places. See Back to the Future fail on DVD.
It's even worse for Super 35, see how awkward T2 now looks in many shots, due to Cameron and Adam Greenberg having forgotten the choices they made in the flurry of finishing the movie.
They say they used reference prints, but none of the framings match the prints I have seen over the years (including the french VHS which is a print).
So yes, scanning the whole frame would be prefered!
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- scale back to final resolution (1080p, 2160p)
use whatever you deem appropriate - I usually use avisynth, but the resize methods it uses are available in many other softwares, along with many others... YMMV!
- crop eventually for 1.78:1, 1.85, or other AR
as before; let's say you have 1080p 1.78:1, and you want to get 1.85:1: just crop 20px from top and 20px from bottom, then add back the same 20px "slices" of black borders - or, better, leave it alone, and if you want/must watch it 1.85:1, let the player overlay the borders on the picture.
About you last question: ff you crop that scan, that is 2.39:1, to 1.85:1, you would end with left and/or right side cropped... what's the point?!?
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