Assaf
Well-known
Hi guys,
I'm a novice in shooting color film but I'm starting to like it.
I shot some Kodak Gold 200, the colors it produced were a bit dull to my taste, but the skin tone it rendered was good. Even when I shot at home with artificial light, balancing the skin tone was easy.
I now shot a roll of Superia 100 - the overall colors were excellent (to my taste) and skin tone, shot with sunlight was good. However, when I shot portraits in the shade, the skin tone tended to be pink and even red.
I must say that my reference is minilab automatic scan. I have a scanner at home but I'm very inexperienced with color balancing so I prefer the automatic scan (at least for the time being).
Did any of you see this effect? Is it because of the film or because of the scanning?
Does Kodak Gold 200 behave better in these situations?
PS - I'm going abroad tomorrow and already bought some Superia 200, I hope I made the right choice....
I'm a novice in shooting color film but I'm starting to like it.
I shot some Kodak Gold 200, the colors it produced were a bit dull to my taste, but the skin tone it rendered was good. Even when I shot at home with artificial light, balancing the skin tone was easy.
I now shot a roll of Superia 100 - the overall colors were excellent (to my taste) and skin tone, shot with sunlight was good. However, when I shot portraits in the shade, the skin tone tended to be pink and even red.
I must say that my reference is minilab automatic scan. I have a scanner at home but I'm very inexperienced with color balancing so I prefer the automatic scan (at least for the time being).
Did any of you see this effect? Is it because of the film or because of the scanning?
Does Kodak Gold 200 behave better in these situations?
PS - I'm going abroad tomorrow and already bought some Superia 200, I hope I made the right choice....
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