Film Transfer / Home Movies to DVD
Do you have your parent’s or grandparent’s old home movie film
still on the reels? Is your 8mm, Super 8mm or even 16mm film
stored in a shoebox in the closet? Did you try watching it years
ago only to find it brittle and breaking, your projectors bulb
burned out or worse eating the film?
Avoid the hassle and wear on your precious film and transfer them to
DVD with the assistance of an experienced Georgia videographer.
Stop the aging process now and preserve your film in a pristine digital format.
Make watching your home movies easy and fun again!
With our capability for video production in Atlanta,
we can personalize your home movies with music, narration, titles, Hollywood style DVD menus, and more.
The possibilities are endless! And then we’ll make inexpensive copies for the entire family.
We use state-of-the-art equipment to transfer your precious home movie film to DVD.
8mm, 16mm, Super 8mm, silent, or sound. We can transfer it to DVD, digitally!
Do you want to edit it yourself? We can also provide it to you on mini DV tape or on a hard drive.
We also offer Georgia video duplication and DVD duplication so you can have copies for your family.
We are not just in the business to preserve your film.
We are in the business of preserving your family’s history.
We are not an assembly line only interested in volume and the bottom line.
We give each memory the respect and attention it deserves.
Make an appointment to come by our studio for videography in Georgia and see samples of Home Movie
Transfers we have done so you know what to expect from your transfer.
Give us a call today to pass on your family legacy for generations to come.
A Quote from an article regarding film preservation -
Don't let it happen to your film!
"Hollywood films bring attention and headlines to the national
effort to preserve films, but it is those films that probably
need the least support.
"Even as Americans fill the movie theaters to see the
latest releases, few are aware that up to half the films produced
in this country before 1950 -- and as much as 90% of those
made before 1920 -- are lost forever," Librarian of Congress
James Billington said. "The National Film Registry seeks
not only to honor these films, but to ensure that they are
preserved for future generations to enjoy."
With the passage of decades, more films are vanishing because
of deterioration of the nitrate stock on which older films
were shot, or because of the more recently discovered "vinegar
syndrome," which threatens the acetate-based stock on
which most motion pictures were reproduced. "
- By Brooks Boliek
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