Inkjet Cinema

Inspired by the 2005 discontinuation of Kodachrome 40 film for Super 8 movie cameras, Jesse England has been experimenting with inkjet and laser printers for film-making. His site goes into details about the how and why. Does anyone have any more examples of print-to-film experiments? Is anyone else doing work like this? Seems like a lot of effort for the payoff but that’s practically the definition of printmaking.

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[vodpod id=ExternalVideo.789998&w=425&h=350&fv=clip_id%3D142042%26server%3Dvimeo.com%26autoplay%3D0%26fullscreen%3D1%26md5%3D0%26show_portrait%3D0%26show_title%3D0%26show_byline%3D0%26context%3Duser%3A138396%26context_id%3D%26force_embed%3D0%26multimoog%3D%26color%3D00ADEF%26force_info%3Dundefined]more about “Printed 16mm film: Laser and Inkjet m…“, posted with vodpod
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Categories: Print-related, Technology


2 Responses to “Inkjet Cinema”

  1. kvh says:

    ok, the cutting out of sprocket-holes is a little insane, but I JUST heard about a new process, on an Epson 2400, printing on Kawasaki (I think?) brand media, that produced a film negative which could be exposed through an enlarger and printed from like any silver-based film… it’s apparently all the talk at the photo-shindigs these days… perhaps not printeresting, but could be shot to… photogravures? maybe? perhaps??

  2. kvh says:

    revised: – I’m mixing up my imports… I think it’s Mitsubishi, but I still can’t find anything about it.