jonesy Posted December 13, 2011 #1 Posted December 13, 2011 does anyone do 8mm film to dvd converting, or know how to do it yourself. have a friend that has keepsake tapes he wants to convert over.
jlh3rd Posted December 13, 2011 #2 Posted December 13, 2011 i converted my stuff back in the 80's using a vcr camera and ,old screen and a dark room, and my old projector......then 2 yrs ago , bought a vcr to dvd converter today..( and this is a guess on my part)...you could get the digital camcorder.....record the films on it .....of course you'll need a dark room, white screen ,wall, sheet etc., old 8mm projector...then transfer from the camera to dvd also, there are little businesses that will do it for you....
bongobobny Posted December 13, 2011 #3 Posted December 13, 2011 You need an analog to digital converter to feed the output of your camera into the computer and some sort of movie editing software to format the video for burning to dvd. The A/D converter boxes are cheap enough, and if your computer is fairly new and has a dvd burner you probably already have the needed software...
Marcarl Posted December 13, 2011 #4 Posted December 13, 2011 We had Walmart copy all our slides onto a CD, I think they do film as well, and the cost 5 years ago wasn't all that bad I think.
etcswjoe Posted December 13, 2011 #5 Posted December 13, 2011 Look it up Video Train tnsfer in the yellow pages, we have several here in Charleston that do it and they charge per foot of film, I think a 50 ft 8mm cost about 10 bucks to convert. Watch out for cheap deals they do not always take the precautions in handling brittle film.
SilvrT Posted December 13, 2011 #6 Posted December 13, 2011 You need an analog to digital converter to feed the output of your camera into the computer and some sort of movie editing software to format the video for burning to dvd. The A/D converter boxes are cheap enough, and if your computer is fairly new and has a dvd burner you probably already have the needed software... Yes, there is a package you can get for under $100 which has the software and necessary cabling. I did that with my 8mm movies a couple years ago. Sorry, can't recall the name of the stuff but I have it at home and can get back to you. It is a time consuming process tho but it works real well. ahhhh... here's the one I got... http://www.roxio.com/enu/products/easy-vhs-to-dvd/standard/overview.html
saddlebum Posted December 13, 2011 #7 Posted December 13, 2011 Yes, there is a package you can get for under $100 which has the software and necessary cabling. I did that with my 8mm movies a couple years ago. Sorry, can't recall the name of the stuff but I have it at home and can get back to you. It is a time consuming process tho but it works real well. ahhhh... here's the one I got... http://www.roxio.com/enu/products/easy-vhs-to-dvd/standard/overview.html Sorry, but I do not see how this would work for 8mm movie film. I too would be interested in converting some 8mm movie film to digital
SilvrT Posted December 13, 2011 #8 Posted December 13, 2011 Sorry, but I do not see how this would work for 8mm movie film. I too would be interested in converting some 8mm movie film to digital ummmm 8mm from a camcorder?? or some other form of 8mm ... or am I getting mixed up as I thought those old camcorders were 8mm...? In any event, I transferred direct from my old camcorder to the computer, the software converted it to digital and then burned it to a DVD.
saddlebum Posted December 13, 2011 #9 Posted December 13, 2011 ummmm 8mm from a camcorder?? or some other form of 8mm ... or am I getting mixed up as I thought those old camcorders were 8mm...? In any event, I transferred direct from my old camcorder to the computer, the software converted it to digital and then burned it to a DVD. Maybe I am mixed up It did not dawn on me that there was such a thing as an 8mm camcorder. I was thinking of the old 8mm movie projector type films from the 50's and 60's. . I have huge reals of the stuff that my father made and would love to put them on DVD or similiar format.
SilvrT Posted December 13, 2011 #10 Posted December 13, 2011 Maybe I am mixed up It did not dawn on me that there was such a thing as an 8mm camcorder. I was thinking of the old 8mm movie projector type films from the 50's and 60's. . I have huge reals of the stuff that my father made and would love to put them on DVD or similiar format. I'm sure there is something for that but I'd suggest it probably requires some fancy expensive hardware device. Did you try Googling ?? I Google everything and usually find an answer LOL what did we ever do before computers, the internet, and Google ???
saddlebum Posted December 13, 2011 #11 Posted December 13, 2011 I'm sure there is something for that but I'd suggest it probably requires some fancy expensive hardware device. Did you try Googling ?? I Google everything and usually find an answer LOL what did we ever do before computers, the internet, and Google ??? No I didn't, I did not even think of it until I read this post. Thats the problem with this web site.....just when you think you have more than enough projects on the go . . . leave it to VR to get you thinking about another one
SilvrT Posted December 13, 2011 #12 Posted December 13, 2011 No I didn't, I did not even think of it until I read this post. Thats the problem with this web site.....just when you think you have more than enough projects on the go . . . leave it to VR to get you thinking about another one Oh yeah to that!! Sure it only cost $12 to join but once a guy is in here, ...... it's like British Columbia all over again (B.C. = Bring Cash)
friesman Posted December 13, 2011 #13 Posted December 13, 2011 ummmm 8mm from a camcorder?? or some other form of 8mm ... or am I getting mixed up as I thought those old camcorders were 8mm...? In any event, I transferred direct from my old camcorder to the computer, the software converted it to digital and then burned it to a DVD. there is 8mm celluloid like the old home movies and the 8mm magnetic tape from the 80-90's that we used in our camcorders. NOT COMPATIBLE with each other. Brian
etcswjoe Posted December 13, 2011 #14 Posted December 13, 2011 there is 8mm celluloid like the old home movies and the 8mm magnetic tape from the 80-90's that we used in our camcorders. NOT COMPATIBLE with each other. Brian I was assuming celluoid since he said fim but I did not think about the 8mm camcorder tapes. When I had my old celloid tapes done they were warped and the professional guys had the right equipment to compensate for this. If I could have found a 8MM projector I would have done it myself.
Flyinfool Posted December 13, 2011 #15 Posted December 13, 2011 Go to ebay and search "film to dvd" there are a lot of places doing this.
dacheedah Posted December 13, 2011 #16 Posted December 13, 2011 I have a box that you project the slide or movie onto and a side that you hook your video camera to. The video camera connects to the computer with firewire cable and the saved file can be edited with movie maker and burned to a DVD.
jonesy Posted December 13, 2011 Author #17 Posted December 13, 2011 This site always gets me answers. I never would have thought of walmart. I thank all of you for putting me on the road for a way to solve this problem. Have a nice holiday to all of you, thanks for help.
Malibu Gregg Posted December 13, 2011 #18 Posted December 13, 2011 http://www.homemoviedepot.com These guys did mine a couple of years ago.
bongobobny Posted December 13, 2011 #19 Posted December 13, 2011 Ahhhh! I totally forgot all about movie film!! I still have my old 8mm video cassette recorder, a Sharp, and that's what I immediately thought of! they used to make this box that you played the film on and it projected into a box and the box also had an electronic lense and it converted it to analog video, but that was years ago...
horsemeat Posted December 18, 2011 #20 Posted December 18, 2011 8mm film transfers is something I've been doing for my consumer clients for several years now. (It's especially popular during the holidays.) To do it right requires that you sync each film frame to one video frame, and then convert the playback speed so the result approximates real-time motion. (Video runs at 30 frames per second, while 8mm film typically runs anywhere from 15 to 18 fps, nominally). That's why a telecine machine is so crucial to getting good results, along with proper cleaning and lubrication of the film. It's also great if the technician cuts out sections of unusable footage, places DVD chapter breaks at the appropriate places, doesn't cram too much video into one DVD, and (if budget allows) adds a music score. It's easy to do it badly, much harder to do it right. I have yet to see any film-based motorcycle POV footage come in the door, sad to say!
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