8 mm movies

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8 mm movies are a motion picture film format with a film strip that is 8 millimeters wide.  There are two principal versions: standard 8 mm film (also known as "regular" or "Double") and Super 8, which has smaller and more widely spaced perforations, allowing for a larger image area.
 
8 mm movies are a motion picture film format with a film strip that is 8 millimeters wide.  There are two principal versions: standard 8 mm film (also known as "regular" or "Double") and Super 8, which has smaller and more widely spaced perforations, allowing for a larger image area.
  
Compared to larger film formats, 8 mm movie film was relatively inexpensive to purchase and develop.  It thus became a popular format for "home movies", and so many people have films of family history interest in this format that they want transcribed into some more modern digital format.   
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Compared to larger film formats, 8 mm movie film was relatively inexpensive to purchase and develop.  It thus became a popular format for "home movies", and so many people have films of family history interest (and occasionally [http://motherboard.vice.com/2012/11/23/the-other-shooter-the-saddest-and-most-expensive-26-seconds-of-amateur-film-ever-made even wider historical interest]) in this format that they want transcribed into some more modern digital format.   
  
 
The availability of projection equipment in many homes also made this one of the first formats heavily used for retail sales of commercial movies, including short features, cartoons, and (especially) pornography.  The "8 mm porn loop" was an early commercial success via direct sales to consumers as well as via exhibition in (sometimes coin-operated) "peep show" adult theaters.
 
The availability of projection equipment in many homes also made this one of the first formats heavily used for retail sales of commercial movies, including short features, cartoons, and (especially) pornography.  The "8 mm porn loop" was an early commercial success via direct sales to consumers as well as via exhibition in (sometimes coin-operated) "peep show" adult theaters.
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* [http://www.wikihow.com/Transfer-8mm-Films-to-Video How to Transfer 8mm Films to Video] at WikiHow
 
* [http://www.wikihow.com/Transfer-8mm-Films-to-Video How to Transfer 8mm Films to Video] at WikiHow
 
* [http://photo.net/video-forum/003WXX 8mm Film to DVD transfer (Do it yourself)] a lengthy Photo.net forum thread with many equipment suggestions and tips/hints
 
* [http://photo.net/video-forum/003WXX 8mm Film to DVD transfer (Do it yourself)] a lengthy Photo.net forum thread with many equipment suggestions and tips/hints
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* [http://www.loc.gov/preservation/resources/rfs/movimg.html Library of Congress Recommended Format Specifications: Moving Image Works]
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* [http://www.centerforhomemovies.org/ Center for Home Movies]

Latest revision as of 00:22, 27 February 2015

File Format
Name 8 mm movies
Ontology


8 mm movies are a motion picture film format with a film strip that is 8 millimeters wide. There are two principal versions: standard 8 mm film (also known as "regular" or "Double") and Super 8, which has smaller and more widely spaced perforations, allowing for a larger image area.

Compared to larger film formats, 8 mm movie film was relatively inexpensive to purchase and develop. It thus became a popular format for "home movies", and so many people have films of family history interest (and occasionally even wider historical interest) in this format that they want transcribed into some more modern digital format.

The availability of projection equipment in many homes also made this one of the first formats heavily used for retail sales of commercial movies, including short features, cartoons, and (especially) pornography. The "8 mm porn loop" was an early commercial success via direct sales to consumers as well as via exhibition in (sometimes coin-operated) "peep show" adult theaters.

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