adma
Superstar
I've been living at 763 Bay for a year, and although I don't particularly like the outside, especially the lower floors, I'm very happy with the quality of the apartment I'm renting.
Something tells me you need an Asprin...
I've been living at 763 Bay for a year, and although I don't particularly like the outside, especially the lower floors, I'm very happy with the quality of the apartment I'm renting.
That's what's great about digital. A digital movie or jpg will look exactly the same in 30 years as it does now. As long as the medium it's stored on is in good condition, anyway.I feel compelled to point out that, as somebody who saw those mid-70s movies at the time they were first released, those movies were NOT all desaturated at the time; they were pretty much like current movies in that respect. I think that their current 'look' is simply due to the effects of age on the film stock. (I also notice this with photo prints from the time -- their current appearance is much faded from what I remember they looked like when they were new.)
Black and white film tends to decay slower than colour film. That's why it's preferred for archival material.