Underexposed & Overdeveloped

You mean overexposed (just a bit, one stop) and overdeveloped... With normal development it would have been close to perfect... But to compensate you should have developed for a shorter time than normal... Developing @800 means developing for a lot of time because you gave film little light...

Anyway, as the film was well exposed, you should have rich shadows and separated tonal range with blown highlights, and that looks fine for lots of situations... Unless you had brides in white, it's fine... That's pretty common in fashion too for color film: overexposing and overdeveloping... A nice bump in contrast without the black shadows push look...

The link doesn't work, by the way...

Cheers,

Juan
 
Ah thanks for clearing that up Juan, I was confused. Anyway, I fixed the link.
Cheers!
 
1. I dig the look. You freaked on it and it came out. Kudos!
2. nobuyoshi araki?
3. I had a Carbon ZRX-1100..so you make me homesick!!!

Rockin!
 
^
1. Thanks! I'm please. It's funny how mistakes often turn out for the best.
2. Yukio Mishima. Way ahead of his time as a photographer. His multiple exposures look like crazy photoshops.
3. Yea its my buddy's bike. Mint condition, sooo nice.
ballz-1.jpg
 
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