Starting in 1963, Kodak privately invited manufacturers of home movie equipment to inform them about a new 8 mm format under development. After
Bell & Howell learned about it, they began developing cameras and projectors as the
Earlybird project, despite incomplete details about the cartridge and film size. held simultaneously with the ongoing
1964 New York World's Fair, Super 8 film comes in plastic light-proof cartridges containing coaxial supply and take-up spools loaded with of film, with 72 frames per foot, for a nominal total of frames per film cartridge. This is enough film for minutes at the professional motion picture standard of 24 frames per second, and for minutes of continuous filming at 18 frames per second (upgraded from the 16 frames per second rate of
standard 8 mm) for amateur use. In 1973, the system was supplemented with a larger cartridge, containing mag stripe film, which allowed sound cameras to record monaural sync-sound audio on the main strip. This included emulsions from Kodak,
Fuji and
Ilford. Today Super 8 color negative film is the main color stock used. There are also Super 8 reversal films available, including 100D Kodak Ektachrome and 200D Agfa color, as well as
black-and-white (B&W) from
Foma,
ADOX,
ORWO and Kodak.
Design Super 8 film and frame dimensions are specified by standards published by ANSI/SMPTE and ISO, including ISO 1700 and 3645; and ANSI/SMPTE ST 149 (superseding ANSI PH22.149) and ANSI/SMPTE ST 157 (superseding ANSI PH22.156M and PH22.157). for scale The standard Super 8 cartridge is a rectangular box approximately and contains 50 feet of film. The Super 8 plastic cartridge is probably the fastest loading film system ever developed, as it can be loaded into the Super 8 camera in less than two seconds without the need to directly thread or touch the film. In addition, coded notches cut into the Super 8 film cartridge exterior allow the camera to recognize the film speed automatically. Canon keeps an exhaustive list of their Super 8 cameras with detailed specifications on what film speeds can be used with their cameras. Usually, testing one cartridge of film can help settle any uncertainty a filmmaker may have about how well their Super 8 camera reads different film stocks. Color
stocks were originally available only in
tungsten (3400 K) Type A, and almost all Super 8 cameras come with a switchable
daylight filter built in, allowing for both indoor and outdoor shooting. The original Super 8 film release was a silent system only, but in 1973, a sound on film version was released. The film with sound had a magnetic soundtrack and came in larger cartridges than the original cartridge in order to accommodate the sound recording head in the film path. Sound cameras are compatible with silent cartridges, but not conversely. Sound film is typically filmed at a speed of 18 or 24 frames per second. Kodak discontinued the production of Super 8 sound film in 1997, citing environmental regulations, as the adhesive used to bond the magnetic track to the film is environmentally hazardous. Kodak introduced a Super 8 cartridge with magnetic sound in 1974; the accompanying Supermatic 200 camera was identical to its existing Ektasound camera, but included a door which allowed the extended reels to extend through the top.
Current use In 2005, Kodak announced the discontinuation of their most popular stock
Kodachrome due to the decline of facilities equipped with the
K-14 developing process. Kodachrome was "replaced" by a new
ISO 64
Ektachrome, which uses the simpler
E-6 process. The last roll of Kodachrome was processed on January 18, 2011, in Parsons, Kansas, by the sole remaining lab capable of processing it. In December 2012, Kodak discontinued color reversal stock in all formats, including 35 mm and Super 8. However, in Spring of 2019, Kodak introduced Ektachrome 100D in super 8 and 16 mm formats, citing surges in demand. Today, there are still a variety of Super 8 film stocks. Kodak sells one Super 8 color reversal stock, Ektachrome 100D, and three Super 8 color negative stocks cut from their Vision 3 film series, ISO 50, ISO 200 and ISO 500, which can be used in very low light. Kodak reformulated the emulsions for the B&W reversal stocks and made Tri-X (ISO 200). Film cut to Super 8 from other manufactured raw stock such as Fuji, Orwo, Adox, Agfa and Foma are also available. Pro8mm offers 7 color negative stocks made from Kodak and Fuji film. Color Reversal film for Super 8 is still available from several Super 8 specialty companies. Wittner Kinotechnik offers Super 8 made from a batch of Agfa Aviphot 200D, which is perforated and slit for Super 8, 8 mm and 16 mm formats. This film is loaded into Super 8 and Single cartridges by several of the specialty companies. Other stocks, such as the new Fuji reversal film, and existing supplies of Kodak 35 mm 100D are often made available in Super 8 by these specialty companies. The growing popularity and availability of
non-linear editing systems has allowed film-makers and any user of film to shoot Super 8 film but edit in digital. This avoids much of the tedium of handling film and the damage to the film, which can occur when editing the actual film. Super 8 films may be transferred (scanned) to digital and then imported into computer-based editing and correction systems for post production. Today's systems can scan Super 8 to
4K digital in a variety of formats. File:Revue S6 Super 8 Kamera.webm|Super 8 camera from ca. 1966 File:Super 8mm spools 3.jpg|Super 8 spools with film File:Kodak spool box 400 ft splice instructions C.jpg|Super 8 spool box 400 ft with splice instructions etc. File:Super 8mm spool with film 6.jpg|Super 8 spool with film - detail "Insert film here" File:Braun nizo-800 hg.jpg|
Nizo film-camera File:Super 8mm film piece frames detail 2.jpg|Super 8 frames - detail File:Filminica (amateur intro in Super-8 mm, 1990).webm|Super 8 shot (example) ==Competitors==