There are two basic methods to produce animation directly on film. One
starts with blank film stock, the other one with black (already
developed) film. On blank film the artist can draw, paint, stamp, or
even glue or tape objects. Black film (or any footage) can be scratched,
etched, sanded, or punched. Any tool the artist finds useful may be
used for this, and all techniques can be combined endlessly. The frame borders may be observed or completely ignored, foubd footage
may be included, any existing image might be distorted by mechanical or
chemical means. A third method takes place in a darkroom, using
unexposed film that is exposed frame by frame. The artists places
objects onto the fresh stock and then uses a small light beam to create
the images. This third category of work has to be sent to a lab and
processed, just like films created with a camera.
Large formats such as 70 or 35 mm film may be preferred for their relatively larger working area, but direct animation is done on16 mm or even super 8 mm film
as well. Since the sound strip on 35 mm film is optical, it is possible
to create synthetic sound as well as images by drawing or otherwise
reproducing forms in the soundtrack area.
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