Harmy
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Han D. SoloYeah, these are quite old. The need to colour correct them to account for the fading means that they can't really be used as a reference.
Pennsylvania Jones said:
"Stick and Stones will break my bones but the Blu-Rays will never Harmy."
Lucas: I am altering the film. Pray I don't alter it any further.
Fans: This film is getting worse all the time!
Dunedain
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Jedi KnightSo, have a set of color correction values been come up with for each movie that will correct the 2006 Star Wars trilogy DVD's about as close as one can get to the original theatrical colors within the limits of that DVD source? After all the adjusting and fine tuning, wondering if there is some agreement among the experts here on what provides the best overall correction?
The Star Wars trilogy. There can be only one.
AntcuFaalb
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The Interweb is a Series of TubesDunedain said:
So, have a set of color correction values been come up with for each movie that will correct the 2006 Star Wars trilogy DVD's about as close as one can get to the original theatrical colors within the limits of that DVD source? After all the adjusting and fine tuning, wondering if there is some agreement among the experts here on what provides the best overall correction?
Check out You_Too's work with DJ.
His color-correction (primarily GIMP curves files loaded into Avisynth via GiCoCu) is probably the most accurate we can get with the GOUT DVDs.
"And I'm shocked at you Moth3r for being off-topic, Because if people off-topic you say "stay on-topic, STAY on-topic, STAY ON-TOPIC", and we are not in the Off topic section of OT.com, now are we?" –pat man
"Look again." –Moth3r
Dunedain
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Jedi KnightI guess it depends if one wants to use the Technicolor print that was shown as the reference or other sources, which, of course, would affect how you do the color restoration. And yeah, I agree, the V2 Blu-ray set is looking superb. :)
The Star Wars trilogy. There can be only one.