Thanks Jan your posts have been very helpful.
You're welcome, Sara. I am glad that my advice has been helpful for you.
I developed the shots from the Pro 400H and they're not bad actually! I think I nearly maybe prefer them to Portra now - yes you are right the Portra is very "yellowey" in certain lighting conditions. I have 5 rolls in my fridge I almost want to get rid of them and start using another colour film.
If you are satiesfied with Pro400H, just use it and have fun.
If you like to try also further films I would recommend Provia 400X: The finest grain, highest resolution and sharpest ISO 400 color film.
400X has excellent skin tones and a very natural, vivid color pallete. It's a real all around film.
Pushed @ ISO 800 results remain excellent, and even @ ISO 1600 they are very good.
Best results you get with a good slide loupe on a lighttable (e.g. the Schneider or Rodenstock 4x loupes are outstanding; you can also use them for negatives and prints) and of course in projection with a good projection lens. Once you have seen this you will be blown away by the outstanding picture quality: The color brillance, max. contrast range, tonality and sharpness in projection are unsurpassed. You can't get that with prints of the same size.
If you have ever seen a projected 400X slide in direct comparisopn to a Pro400H or Portra 400 print of the same size you immediately realize what I mean: There is no compettion, the prints look quite crappy compared to the projected slide.
Very good slide projectors and lenses are currently extremely cheap. It is a very good time to buy now.
If you are interested and need some recommendations and tips just ask me. I will help you.
ps. I'm scared of flash! I hate flash! 🙁
Well, there flash, and then there is
balanced fill-in flash with modern cameras and flashes
🙂. They do look completely different.
With balanced fill-in flash you can get results which look absolutely natural. You even don't realize that flash was used in the picture! But with this method you can get both shadow and highlight detail despite high contrasts. And you can avoid color casts in mixed lighting situations.
It is a very useful and versatile technique.
Cheers, Jan