= NOTES ON OPTICAL PRINTER TECHNIQUE
Magnification 1 Fadea in Original 14
Blowup.& Reduotion 2 Chart C: Neutral Déneity and
Blowup Sharpness 2 Equivalent Shutter
Printer Lenses 3 Angle 15
Optical Zoom 3 Image Superposition 16
Lene Aperture 3 Gamma # Bipack 16
Focusing 4 Incidentally 16
Focusing Aperture 4 Exposure Compensation 18
Focusing Precision 4 Special Originals 18
Focusing Target 4 Texturing 18
Depth of Field 4 Multi-Exposure 19
Bolex Priam 4 Multi-Pack 19
Bolex Groundglass 4 Natural Superposition 19
Defecus 4 Flashing 19
X-Y Adjustment 4 Contrast Adjustment 19
Exact 13:1 5 Color Image Superposition 20
Ainframe 5 Weighted Double Exposures 20
Franelines 6 Dissolves 21
Emulsion Position T Effects Dissolves 2}
Time 8 Fades from Negative 21
Fancy Freeze 8 Color Exposure 22
Fancy Slow 8 Testing 22
Diffusers 8 CC Pack Reduction 25
UV Filter 9 High Contrast Printa 25
IR Filter 9 Hicon Exposure 26
Green Filter 3 Contrast Building Steps 26
Filter Location 9 Hicon Speckle 26
Exposure 9 Tone Isolation 27
Exposure Adjusters 9 Logie of Mask Combination 27
Specifying Exposure 11 Image Spread and Bloom 27
Film Speed 11 Mask and Countermask 28
Right Exposure 1 Reversal/Negative Fitting 28
Generations 2 Feathered Maska 29
Bellows Formula 13 Image Marriage 2g
Fades 13 Mask Blacknesé 30
Log Fade 14 Hicona from Color Originals 30
Bolex Variable Shutter 14 Hicon Processing 30
Linear Fade 14 Optical Printed Release Prints 31
Other Fades 14 Ritual and Art 31
i on
| revisec .
NOTES ON OPTICAL PRINTER TECHNIQUE
DENNIS COUZIN
March 1983
An optical printer 18 a device for photographing the frames
of one film sco as to make another filn.
e 2 - . ,
I
Cc
It consists essentially of @ camera (C) connected by a
bellows (B) to a lens (L) aimed at a film in a gate (G) illuminated
from behind by a lamp (I).
The camera and gate each have motorized intermittant filin
movements so that any frame of the "original" film can be
conveniently photographed onto any frame of the "print" filo.
The camera can be an ordinary cine camera, less its lens,
and the gate can be an ordinary cine projector, less its lens.
Ideally they have identical syatemsa of film registration, aa if
one Were the lens’ image of the other. The lens can be any
bellows mountable lens. Ideally it ie specially corrected for
the amall and nearly equal sizes of this object and image.
The camera and the lens can elide independently to and fro
the film gate. Thie adjustea the magnification and the focus of
the photography.
MAGNIFICATION If the lens is (nominally) midway between the films
when one is focused on the other, then the magnification
is 1. At M=1 (also called 1:1} the whole of the original
frame 1s photographed at a size which fllis the whole
of the print frame.
i ) oY ?
If the lens 18 moved closer to the gate, then the
camera must be moved back, farther from the gate,
_ to keep the one film focused on the other. Then the
Copyright (1983 by Dennie Couzin
r
2
magnification is greater than 1. At M>1 a part of the
original frame is photographed at a size which fille the
whole of the print frame.
If, starting from the 1:1! setup, the lene is moved
farther from the gate, then the camera must also be
moved back, farther from the gate, to keep the one film
focused on the other. Then the magnification is loser
than 1. At M<1! the whole of the original frame is
photographed at a size wohich does not fill the whole
of the print frame. The remainder of the print frane
46 filled with a photograph of the gate as it surrounds
the original frame (ideslly perfectly black).
6 y
For each position of the lens there is exactly one
correct (focused) position for the camera. But for
each position of the camera (except the 13:1 position)
there are two correct positions for the lens. One
gives M>1, the other M<}.
BLOWUP & REDUCTION The printer gate may hold Smm film and the printer
camera 16mm, or vice versa. With ap M=2 setup an
Sum original frame 18 photographed onto a whole
1énm frame. With an M=¢t setup a whole !6um original
frame is photographed onto an Smm frame. Conversion
between any two film gauges 4s possible thia way,
provided the frames have the sane proportions, as
Sum, super San, 16mm, and some 55ma do.
BLOWUP SHARPNESS A 16mm picture of a flea can be just as sharp ae
@ 16mm picture of an elephant. Fut & \é6an picture
of an Smm picture cannot be expected to be as sharp
as a t6mn picture of a 16mm picture. Pictures differ
. from thinge in having very limited detail. The 16as
blawup, even if it preserven all the pictorial detail
of the mm original, spreads it out, so the blowup
ie less sharp absolutely than the original.
,
3
Under extreme magnification -- a microscope objec
eould be the printer lene -- pictorial detail i: diffuse
and the underlying natural thing, the enulsion, is all
that could be photographed sharply. But the grains are
too small to be sharply imaged with light. Here even
the natural thing haa been photographically exhausted,
an 8mm original blown up to 16mm and projected will
appear sharper than the sane 8mm original optically
printed onto Smm and projected. If the blowup optics
are good thie is even true when the 1:1 printing is by
contact. Likewise for 16mm to 35mm. (This ie all due
to the print film being in effect twice as sharp and
half as grainy in a bigger frame.)
PRINTER LENSES A lens well-corrected for M-1 is less well-corrected
for M=? (or M=t). A lene Wwell-corrected for M=2 is
leas wall-corrected for M=4 (or M=%). Etc. (Floating
elementea improve this.) A lens well-corrected for M=1
for a larger format is lees than ideal for M-1 for a
smaller format. With such specialization (and expense)
in optical printer optics what ie the hope for the
$50 SOmm enlarger lens, optimized for M=.1 and much too
large a format? Wot bac, provided the sharpest aperture
ie found and heeded and focusing technique is eine.
Aleo, for Mé! ano asyunetrical lens should be mounted
the right way, which is usually with its smaller glass
facing the smaller image.
A very sharp cheap printer lens is the Canon Macrophoto
35mm £/2.8.
OPTICAL ZOOM Optical printers do not use soom lenses, although they could.
An optical printer toom is made by moving the camera and
lene each frame, so as to vary magnification while holding
focus. It is a dolly shot! A dolly abot is equivalent
to a toom for a flat subject.
Geometrically this zoom oan be identical to a zoom had
it been made in the original photography. It can also
be deviant, by tracking not to the center of the frame.
Pictorially the zoom gets grainy, showing that it was
not made in the original photography.
Rather than focua at each frame, camera am lene positions
can be precharted for, say, every 10th frame, and the other
positions interpolated or computed. On the J-E, counting
the turns of the lead screw ie a means of repeatable
positioning. A follo¥-focus sechanian is @ boon to optical
Z£oons.
The rate and course of s00ming is a factor of style,
as it is in original cinematography.
LESS APERTURE” For picture taking the printer lens should be at whichever
aperture gives the sharpest pictures. This 4e found in
teste. If a lens must be atopped down past f/8 to reach
optimum it is a terrible printer lene.
F
4
FOCUSING Printer focusing procedure is different at different magnifi
At 1:1 the camera, not the lens, 4e moved for focusing,’ Gulp)
at magnifications greater than about 1.4 18 it better to nove
the lens for focusing.
Near the t:1 setup lens motion has no focusing effect. With
the camera fixed in its 1:1 position lens motion: adjusts
magnification between about M=.96 and M=1.04 (at f/5.6).
FOCUSING APERTURE With all but the best optical printer lenses either
(1) foous at the taking aperture or (2) foous at a
larger aperture and then shift focus by a pre-established
distance before taking. This "fudge-factor" is found in
film teate.
FOCUSING PRECISION Especially when focusing stopped dowm, focus many
times (perhaps 20) and set an average position.
FOCUSING TARGET Use whatever target ie found eablest to focus on.
One caution: the fudge-factor is target dependent.
Very fine resolution targete may require different
fudge factora than coarser targete do.
DEPTH OF FIELD at indicated f/5.6 there is already more than enough
depth of field for a4 bipack, at 1:1. dAleo it ig unnecessary
to refocus when adding the second film. Likewlee when
a single film ie reversed’ emulsion to base. At larger
apertures and at larger magnifications depth of field
is lese.
BOLEX PRISM It isn't a worry. There len't a distinetion between RX
lenees and non-RX lenses for most any lens which will be
used on a bellows for optical printing.
BOLEX GROUNDGLASS Only for the best optical printer lenses, which will
be used at apertures larger than f/4, does the Bolex
groundglass need to be reset from its everyday position.
DEFOCUS To throw an image out of focua without changing ite size, if
printing at i:1, move the camera 4 distance and the lens ¢ this
dietance, in the same direction.
X-Y ADJUSTMENT Besides its to and fro movement the lene haa lateral
movements. These adjust the position of the original
frame's image on the print frame. For example, if the
lens is raised a bit...
5
At 1:1 moving the lens up a distance d raises the viewed
field by twice 4d. Likewise for down, right, and left.
At M>1 lateral adjustment effects a scan of the original
frame. This is not geometrically equivalent to a pan,
bad it been made in the original photography,
On simple optical printers the only lateral ad Justment
is of the lens (rather than the heavier camera or gate).
Thie is Geometrically adequate.
But the J-K adjustments are even too flimsy for a lens.
It helps, after they are set, to gently tap the lens, ac
it finds a stable position, and then to readjust if
necessary, etc., etc.
EXACT 1:1 The lateral movements of the lens, the to-fro movements of
the lens and camera, and a tilting of the camera (if necessary)
allow the optical printer to be set for exact 1:1 reproduction.
Then the printed image is the same aize and in the same position
as the original image. If the printer lacks a tilt adjustment
the oamera may be shinmed.
AIMFRAME A Special frame is made to guide the exact 1:1 setup. To make
an "aimframe" use the optical printer camera (though not
necessarily with the optical printer lens) to photograph a
target which is epecially drawn to contain detaila exactly’
coinciding, as seen through the camera eyepiece, with details
permanently on the groundglass. The photograph made while the
coincidence is seen is the ainfrane.
Every groundglass has some permanent detaile, even if only ite
flaws. The field edge is a poor choice of detail if the mask
is thick or if the eyepiece is aberrated at the edge. Two
points of detail are enough for a well~aligned printer, three
pointe for a suspect one.
A reticle made on high resolution film may be attached to the
groundglass to add details. Small patterns of concentric circles
and other patterns which self-moiré are ideal. also the ainframe
can be a negative of the fine-patterned reticle.
For exact 1:1! setup, the aimframe film is registered in the
printer gate and the printer camera and lens adjusted to
achieve that same coincidence of details, as seen through
the eyepiece. Focusing must be completed before the final
adjustment to the aimframe. It is convenient to incorporate
a focusing target in the aimframe.
The aimframe has validity only for the camera in which it was
made. It does not depend on the accuracy of the camera'a
reflex viewing eystem, only the stability of the eysten.
Whenever there is doubt about the validity of the aimfrane,
such as after a camera repair or because of wear to the filn,
the old aimframe can be registered in the printer gate, aimed
on, .and photographed to make a newly valid aimframe.
For rotoscoping with primitive contrapLions, an aimframe may
be projected and drawn. This drawing is later used to aim
the camera (whose aimframe it was) when photographing the
rotoscoped drawings.
Fo
6
The 1:1 accuracy of optical printing with aimframe setups ie
limited by 1. the precision in the making and then in the use
of the aimnfraze,
2. the precision in the film registration mechanians
of camera and gate,
3. only if the two mechanieme are different, the
precision in the film dimensions (perforation
and alitting).
Btep contact printing, Buch 48 by bipacking in the optical printer
eamera, if & convenient method for making exact 1:1 reproductions.
It must give exposures which are exact 1:1, but there 18 then sone
shrinkage in processing. Optical printing with the ainfrane methoc
compensates for processing shrinkage. Shrinkage errore are too
apall to matter with simple printers.
GAMEFRAME A atrip of identical frames, shot in the optical printer camera,
is cut in two and registered in both the printer gate (upright,
eanulgion away from lene) and the camera gate (ae it was shot).
The coincidence of detaile of image and sameframe is viewed throug
an opening in the rear of a special pressure plate. ™~.90 (3 stops) 12.6 23 1A 30
~.95 11.2 20.2 15 26
™ 4,00: - 10 18 13 24
ee ™1.05 8.91 16 12 21
ad 1.10: - 7.94 14.2 19 19 |
1.15 7.08 12.7 2 17 |
. ™“1.20.-(4 stops) 6,31 11.4 3 15
1.25 5.62 10.1 7 13
~. ™1.30° 5.01 9 7 12
13s 4,47 B 2 11
“1. 40 3.98 7.2 G 9
™ 1,45. *~ 3.55 6.4 5 3 5
1.50 (5 stops) 3.15 5.7 4 7 .
~~
2:00
16
IMAGE SUPERPOSITION In an overall combination of two images, the two
can infuse each other as lightness or as darkness,
or they can be slapped onto each other. There are
three basic types of image superposition, named
according to how they are made.
Pictures A & B combined by...
(1) Double exposure from positives. The print film
is eared twice, once from A's positive, once
from B's positive.
(2) Double exposure fron mepetizes: The print film
Ts expose wice, once from A 8 negative, once
from B's negative.
(3) Bipack. Two films, either A's and B's positives,
Or é6lee A's and B's negatives, are inserted
together in the printer gate. The print film
4s exposed once, from this pair.
The print film is unspecified. It is in the final
positive print that the three types of combination
are compared, and they look very different. For
B&W the differences can be described by how tones
combine.
With (t}, lightness dominates. Where one tone
combines with another tone the result is nearly
the lighter of the two tones.
With (2), darkness dominates. The result ia nearly
the darker of the two tones.
———=> With (3), there is contrastification which complicates
the tone combination. If a bipack is examined ray
(unprinted) wherever both images are clear the bipaer
4a clear. Wherever either image is black the bipack
4s at least that black. Wherever both images are
black the bipack is doubly black. The bipack, whiob
appears dark, has a tonal range doubling that of the
single images. The bipack is wprintable in toto.
To abstract a pioture from the unprintable bipack
printing exposure is typically increased 1-4 atops.
With 4 stops increase, where clear and black eoincide
printe as a dark grey would—not 4 clear domination
of either lightness or darkness. With 2 stops increase
there is darkness domination.
GaMMa ¢ BIPACK If the bipack is printed onto gamma $ material, to reduce
the contrast to normal, it is a true tonal blender,
without dowinance, of the two images. As the graphs below
show, the gamma # bipack ia the mean between the type (1)
~ and type (2) double exposures.
INCIDENTALLY A type (3) of a type (1) and a type (2) le just a type (3)
again.
r. a a
17
Four idealized graphs summarize the three basic types of
superposition and the gamma # bipack.
Example: 4 has density .75 and B has denaity 1.75 in one
place. From the first graph, the double exposure
from positives has density about 1.0 in that place.
as Pous exfosup am Foss as BiPACK. (10 Come
as Me de
is ib fo]
je ia
cy -
e
5 = io LS ts a: Sg = he Lf wt as
Ly Ltt L Pi 5 A ‘a 2 2 APPA L elie
= i wat
ae Le
‘ly \ WX |
Fo x7 14 ie to as 85 e 2 4 20 oe
For a double exposure it doesn’t matter which exposure is
first, or what time separates the two. In some multi-head
optical printers, using 4 bean-splitter, the two exposures
are simultaneous. Kither way, the two filma can be
independently adjusted for exposure, filtered, etc.
For a bipack it doesn't matter which film ie in front. Also
the two may be optically instead of mechanically bipacked.
In some multi-head optical printers the films are in separate
~gates, ones projection becoming the other's illumination. Ir
a simple printer one film may be in the gate and the other in
the camera, in front of the print film. Any Way, the two
films ehare one exposure adjustment and filtration.
18
When filmwe will be physically bipacked they should firet
be wiped with a lubricating film cleaner. This ie good
practice for all optical printing when delicate originals
receive heavy handling.
EXPOSURE COMPENSATION For superpositions from random pictorial originale:
For double exposures, the typical exposure adjustment
is one stop of decrease from normal, during each
exposure.
With this adjustment a double exposure of
picture A with picture A ie the Bame as a
single normal exposure of A.
For bipacks there ie no recipe. Expoaure adjustment
ie extremely dependent on whioh tones coincide with
which. The adjustment is an increase from normal.
In ignorance of the originals (why?) and ignorance
of the intentions (why?) guess 2% stops increase.
No exposure adjustment can make a bipack of
picture A with picture A the same as picture
A printed the same. But a gamma $ bipack of
picture A with picture A is the same a6 picture .
SPECIAL ORIGINALS For superpositions not from random pictorial originals
tones might not combine at all. One image might fall
on the other's black, or clear, and exposure compensation
48 different, perhaps unnecessary.
With special, rigged, originale superposition is not
image combination in the earlier sense but image
apportionment -- implantings and supplantings.
The rulee of tone combination etill apply, but trivially,
and a eimpler logic prevails.
Double exposing from positives, where one image is
——_>> black the other image appears, unaffected by the doubie
exposure, Where one image is very light it appears,
hardly affected by the double exposure.
Double exposing from negatives, where one image (the
picture, not the film) ie clear the other image appears,
unaffected by the double exposure.
Bipacking, where one image is any even tone, the other
image appears, unaffected exoept for brightness. The
clear parts of one film are windowa for the other film.
But it is possible, with enough extra exposure, to
force one image through the blackened window of the other
The most extreme cases of rigged originals involve high
contrast masks, Gisoussed below.
TEXTURING In~a bipack, an image.of a plain white eurface, showing just
= ite texture, imparte this texture to the other image.
19
MULTI-EXPOBURE Triple, quadruple, etc. multiple exposures are made
similarly to double exposures. If there would be 5
exposurea from the same or nearly the same original,
then each should receive 1/5 normal exposure. From
Chart C, 1/5 of full shutter equals ND.70 compensation.
eat lizely the originals are special, and the compensation
ess,
MULTI-PAck Tripacks, quadripacks, etc. are unmanageable in simple optical
printers. For suob effects intermediate prints must be made.
For example, to quadripack A,B,0,D make printed bipacks of
A with B and C with Dand bipack these two printe. The order
of the originals doesn't matter.
NATURAL SUPERPOSITION Of the three types only (1), the double exposure
from positives, corresponds to possible camera origina:
4n original double exposure made from two real scenes
la practically the same as a printer double exposure
made from positive images of the acenes.
Type (2), the double exposure from negatives, ia
an artifact of the "log linear" response of negative
films.
Type (3), the bipack, is an artifact of the
transparency of film images, at least one of then.
Type (1) 16 nature's super. Preasing one eyeball
produces such superpositions.
FLASHING Double exposing an image with no image -- sere light -- lightens
(or with colored light and color print filma, colors) the blacks
and darker tones while having little effect on middle tones
and even lese on lights. It is8 not a true method of contrast
reduction.
Sepia toning can be simulated by both color flashing and color
filtering when printing B&W original onto color reversal print filr
A healthy yellow, magenta, or cyan flash when printing onto color
reversal film yields, respectively, the yellow, magenta, or cyan ~
image, as if this dye layer were prised from the original film.
There ie no photographic method for unflashing a flashed image.
There is image addition (double exposure} and image pultipliocation
(Dipack) and even image division (bipack of positive with
negative), but no image subtraction.
CONTRAST ADJUSTMENT Gammas add or subtract in a bipack, so bipacking
can adjust contrast. A bipack (printed gamma 1 or
Viewed raw) of an original with its duplicate is
like a double contrast original.