GLOSSARY
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Fade - A transition from a shot
to black where the image gradually becomes darker is a Fade Out; or
from black where the image gradually becomes brighter is a Fade In.
Fades are done at the lab in the printing phase, but prepared by the
negative cutter, who cuts in an overlap of black into the A&B
rolls. Labs will only do fades in fixed amounts, such as 24 frames, 48
frames, etc.
Flex-Fill - A round cloth
bounce card mounted on a flexible ring that can be folded up when not
in use.
5,400K - is the color
temperature of Daylight.
Filler, Fill or Sound Fill -
Filler is scrap film, most often used to keep a sound track running the
same length as the picture, even though there is just silence. When
used this way in can also be called sound fill. Filler is usually a
print with the emulsion scraped off the center all the way along,
perhaps to prevent bootlegging, but also useful in that a mark can be
seen on both sides through this wide scratch.
Film Cement - A liquid that is
actually not a glue, but a chemical that melts and fuses two pieces of
film together.
Film Speed - The sensitivity to
light for proper exposure of a given film stock. This is primarily a
result of the size of the silver halides in the emulsion, the larger
the grain, the less light is needed for exposure. Film stocks are
generally spoken of as being fast or slow, a fast film having large
grains and needing less light, a slow film having smaller grain and
needing more light.
Film Plane - The film plane is the plane of depth from the lens of the
film, behind the gate, in the camera. It is also the point from where
the distances on the focusing ring should be measured from, and is
indicated on the outside of the camera with a little symbol that looks
like the planet Saturn turned on its side.
Filter - A tinted glass or
small tinted plastic sheet placed in front of the lens or behind the
lens in a filter holder, used to change the color rendition of the
entire shot. Filters are used to convert tungsten balanced film for use
in daylight or vice versa. The can also be used for aesthetic reasons,
such as a red filter to darken the sky when filming in black and white.
Fixed Focal Length Lens - see
Prime Lens.
Flag - This has two meanings.
1.: It can be a large black cloth on a frame used on a shoot to keep
light out of part of the composition. 2.: In the cutting room it is a
small piece of tape attached to a shot in a roll and used exactly as
you would use a bookmark. The flag sticks out the side of the roll,
making it easy to find that shot again quickly.
Flare - This has two meanings:
1.: When using film on a daylight spool, the erratic pattern of raw
light that washes out the beginning and end of the roll are known as
“the flares.” 2.: A flare of the other kind is a Lens Flare. It is
caused when light strikes the lens and either causes the entire image
to be fogged in appearance, or for a little row of polygons (the
silhouette of the iris) to appear from the light hitting the surfaces
of the many elements in the lens. It is solved by flagging the lens.
Flash Frame - 1.: A flash frame
is a single frame that is completely clear between two shots. It occurs
when the camera is stopped with the gate open, allowing for a very long
exposure on that single frame. Rather than a problem, a flash frame can
actually be a very helpful thing in the editing room, making it very
easy to see where one shot ends and another begins. This type of flash
frame usually does not occur with spring wound cameras, like the Bolex,
except when the spring winds all the way down, but the second type is
something with which to be more concerned. 2.: A flash frame is also
used to describe the first few overexposed, brighter frames at the
beginning or the end of a shot, due to the camera needing time to reach
speed. These can often be hard to see while editing, but are much more
noticeable in a final print.
Flatbed - An editing machine
resembling a desk with a screen in the middle. The film sits flat on
plates which are threaded through the center section that has
transports for picture and sound.
Focal Length - Simply put, how
wide or narrow a view the lens will provide, smaller numbers being
wider and larger numbers being narrower.
Fog - This is when stray raw
light has found a chance to expose you film. Also a filter as in
fog filter that diffuses the image.
Foley - The recording of custom
sound effects during post production in the same way that dialogue is
dubbed. The term comes from the name of its inventor.
Follow Focus - A shot where
focus is changed while shooting to correspond with the moment of the
subject (or the camera).
Footage - 1.: The amount of
film one has shot. 2.: The whole of the exposed film itself.
Foot Candle - Measurement of
light. One foot candle is the light of one candle, one foot away. Many
light meters will use foot candles as a starting number, which then
must be converted into an f-stop based on the sensitivity of the film
you are using. (Because of the great variety of different film speeds
it is sometimes ambiguous to talk too much about foot candles, since a
given number of foot candles will not yield the same f-stop from one
film speed to another.)
Frame - A single image (of a
series of them) on a piece of film. There are 24 frames per second.
Frame Handles - Frame handles
are extra frames at the beginning and the end of every shot, the exact
number will vary from one application to the next, which are used
primarily when preparing original material for optical printing, such
as the Zero Cut method of blow up, or the creation of a superimposed
title, etc. The purpose they serve, in the case of zero cut, is to make
sure the registration pin of the printer is not grabbing a splice,
which can cause the image to wobble. With opticals they are often used
merely to avoid printed-in dirt, which is much more prevalent close to
a splice where bits of film cement can flake off.
Frame Line - The small sliver of space between frames. This is where
two shots are cut apart and joined.
French Flag - A small black
metal flag attached to the camera with a positionable arm that is used
to shade the lens from light in the case of a Flare (2).
F-stop - The scale used to
measure the size of the opening of the iris on a lens. Opening the iris
wider lets in more light, and closing it down, smaller, lets in less
light. F-stops can be a little confusing, because the larger the
number, the smaller the opening of the iris, and conversely the smaller
the number, the larger the opening. The typical f-stop scale is 1.4 - 2
- 2.8 - 4 - 5.6 - 8 - 11 - 16 - 22. When the reading is between stops,
this should be accounted for it setting the lens, however, it is much
more clear, even if it sounds grammatically incorrect to the
mathematically inclined, to say “One third above 5.6” rather than “5.8”
because it is very hard to judge the distance in decimals between
numbers like 5.6 and 8, whereas 1/3rd above 5.6 is perfectly clear.
Fullcoat - Fullcoat is Mag
Stock with a layer of oxide that completely covers one side, unlike
Stripe. All 16mm mag is fullcoat. 35mm is available in both fullcoat
and stripe. The difference in 35mm is that fullcoat can be used for
recording several tracks, and it typically used for the Mix Master.
Fullcoat is also more expensive than stripe.