AntcuFaalb said:
frank678 said:
I tried to keep my hand off the vlc image adjust settings, I really did, but I could'nt help myself. This is very subtle tweak (no hue change) and makes the colour 'spread out' a little more on my monitor. Adding a bit more yellow to sand, hair, skin etc. However I'm fairly certain this is pretty needless i.e. the print behind this bootleg I think is probably as good as it gets possibly 100% correct and its only the 1978 capture which can't by its very nature display the whole of the 35mm range with one setting.
contrast 0.98, b 0.93, h 360, s 1.02, g 1.38, also sharpened 0.16
Can you rephrase this? I'm not too sure what you're trying to say here.
here's our version of it:
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frank678 said:
This is the still Mike Verta posted of a star wars print being projected with a 70s bulb,
PS78
PS78 with a merged gold overlay to replicate the effect of the 70s bulb
What I'm trying to determine is is the Pre ANH bootleg different from PS78 colourwise because it was captured with a different bulb. Also is the cinematography of star wars dependent on this 70s bulb completing it/pushing it over the edge (i.e. the colours are muted and then the 70s bulb makes them shine , so it is not dynamic in contrast but still dynamic in colour). This is speculation - input/correction invited.
edit/add: or do some telecines just produce a slight hue change?
here's our version of it:
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and one more:
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Have you experimented with "force aspect ratio" you enter in a value 266:100 in video preferences and save, and it plays it like that on restart. This is how it looks doing that.
However, if thats not right another thing that might work is use an aspect ratio calculator counting the number of pixels and try to find the correct force aspect ratio numbers to output that number of pixels.
ours:
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later
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