Gray Fox
Well-known
I love the colors of the 400UC, but would like the fine grain of a slower film. Does anyone have experience using the Koday 100UC?
julianphotoart
No likey digital-phooey
I use it pretty regularly. It's quite high-contrast and vivid. I've had 3 different developing labs generate unacceptable prints because the combination of the film's high contrast and the machines' settings just make the contrast too much to bear. One has to find a lab that can set the machine to NOT adjust or correct anything. This might sound like stating the obvious on RFF. I don't know. All I know is that when using regular consumer-grade 100-speed films like Kodak "Gold 100" and the like, the labs' "auto" settings don't have the same effect as when UC100 is run through.
bigdog
Established
Kodak 400 UC is my favorite 400 speed color film. When I want a fine grain 100 speed color negative film, Reala gets my vote. It is low contrast, but that is fine with me since I normally use this film under high contrast outdoor lighting and I can bump up the contrast if need be after I scan in Photoshop.
fuwen
Well-known
julianphotoart said:I use it pretty regularly. It's quite high-contrast and vivid. I've had 3 different developing labs generate unacceptable prints because the combination of the film's high contrast and the machines' settings just make the contrast too much to bear. One has to find a lab that can set the machine to NOT adjust or correct anything. This might sound like stating the obvious on RFF. I don't know. All I know is that when using regular consumer-grade 100-speed films like Kodak "Gold 100" and the like, the labs' "auto" settings don't have the same effect as when UC100 is run through.
I am also having problems with UC100 with my colour lab. While they have no problems with the VC160 I used previously, I am having quite a lot of colour issues with UC100. I was about to give up but fortunately they managed to hit the correct settings for the film. However it seems like I need to overexpose a stop, and they need to adjust on their optical machine -7 for yellow, +2 for magenta and +3 for density.
Anyone else has the same experience?
sepiareverb
genius and moron
I've had problems with color too- I always ended up with weird casts in the red tones- they tend to get a touch purple like the thumbnail above- you do have a very nice red in that sunlit part of the roller Doug- better than I ever got. You might try the Portra 160 VC- I've always had better results with those films from Kodak- tho again, reds seem to be the hard part for Kodak.
I've just had to find a new lab since Fleshtone Miami closed or is about to. I'm trying LTI in NY right now with a few rolls- which may be back tomorrow.
I've just had to find a new lab since Fleshtone Miami closed or is about to. I'm trying LTI in NY right now with a few rolls- which may be back tomorrow.
Share: