Subject: Liquid-gate printing
I promised Bob I would look for a decent description of liquid-gate printing, but it seems that my personal library has been weeded of reminders of aspects of past lives rather more thoroughly than I'd thought and this is all I could dig up. >From Lenny Lipton's _Independent Filmmaking_ [Straight Arrow Books: San Francisco, 1972]: A Technique that accomplishes much the same kind of restoration [as silicone coating] can be performed during printing, usually optical printing.... The rejuvenation process is called wet printing or liquid-gate printing because the film, as it passes through the glass-enclosed printer gate, is immersed in a liquid bath. The liquid fills in the abrasions, and to some extent suppresses the grain pattern of the film. There is some controversy about the effectiveness of this procedure to suppress grain. It seems reasonable, though, to expect that the surface grain at least will be diminished. Liquid-gate printing is useful no only for the restoration of damaged film, but also for maintaining the highest possible quality in undamaged film, especially in the preparation of printing masters and enlargements from the 8mm formats to 16mm or 16mm to 35mm. *** Conservation DistList Instance 5:2 Distributed: Saturday, May 25, 1991 Message Id: cdl-5-2-004 ***Received on Saturday, 25 May, 1991