Convert your 8mm film to DVD to preserve family memories for a lifetime. Film, including super 8mm, becomes brittle over time. When you transfer your 8mm home movies to DVD, you can relive your favorite moments over and over again.
Why Transfer 8mm Film to DVD?
·8mm and super 8mm film can degrade and become brittle over time. High-quality DVD transfers can last up to 100 years with proper care.
·DVD technology is more accessible. There is no need to find an 8mm projector and a blank wall.
At Front Range DVD we use a True frame-by-frame transfer system that looks at each individual frame of your 8mm film and then digitalizes each one. The results are superb original colors that are not white and washed out like in some transfers (check out the video to the right).
Step 1: Clean the Film. We clean your 8mm film with a special solvent removing all the oils (from running it through projectors over the years), fingerprints, and dirt or dust--all of which can make the film look bad. A clean 8mm filmproduces a brighter, cleaner picture for processing. It also protects the original film for years to come.
Step 2: Process the Film. Front Range DVD uses digital transfer technology to process the film frame-by-frame. Many transfer companies still use old methods: shining the image onto a screen and videotaping the result. The final product can look whitewashed, and you can see the flickering of the film.
Step 3: Save the files on DVD. After your 8mm film has been digitally processed, we save the files on the highest quality DVD's. The results are your memories are preserved with their original quality on a medium that will last for many generations and will not degrade in quality, even in storage.
Give us a call today at 970-292-8776
and get started saving your precious moments forever.
Prices starting at .15 per foot, includes, cleaning the film, a true frame-by-frame transfer, removing bad sections of the film, some color corrections, one title, chapter points,and music.
All transfers include one DVD and NO SET UP FEE.
Serving Fort Collins, Estes Park, Loveland, Cheyenne, Greeley, Windsor, Denver
Never use paper labels on a DVD or CD. The paper can tear and make the disc turn unevenly in the machine. This can destroy both your disc and your player.