Thanks. Finder... Maybe it's all a scanning thing...
But honestly I think I remember with underexposure films used to go a bit blue...
And all the recent talk about differences in color on Ektar... Aren't real on film? Just a scan thing?
I can believe we can filter N-2 and N+3 and we can get an image from them, but yet I can't believe that media gives identical color if we give it x light or 32 times that light... I refuse to believe it's just contrast and saturation... Layers must suffer to some degree at some exposure points affecting balance...
But well, It seems it's almost impossible to be sure about what's on film unless we see our positive way...
Cheers,
Juan
Why does underexposure make the image cooler? is it the situation in which you underexpose or the underexposure itself? I am not sure I know the answer. I do know when I underexpose, it is usually around dusk or twilight when there is a lot of skylight in the shadows.
However, you can do a test. Photograph a step wedge--a series of neutral blocks going from black to white. Is the lighter portion of the wedge a different color than the darker portion? If so, then your hypothesis would be correct.
Thinking about this more, if the contrast of the blue/yellow layer did not equal the other two layers, then you could get a warmer or cooler result based on exposure. You would also end up with a cross-curve where the shadows and highlights would not be the same--cool shadows and warm highlights (the step wedge test above would also show this). My next question would be why not magenta/green or cyan/red shifts with exposure? Why is there a dominance with the blue/yellow layer? All of the cross-curves I have seen have been a result of bad development.
But then you put this in an enlarger and change any changes with a filter pack anyway. Since it is so much easier to change color balance with filtration during printing, why do your want to over- or underexpose your film to do this? Bad exposures have their own problems.
Now about shooting color. Colors in the image are really different under different lighting. If I shoot under sunny, cloudy, or skylight conditions, the colors in the image are very different. I could not color balance the other two condition to match a single one, sunny for example. The colors would simply not match or is I matched one color (red for example), the other colors would be way off. Naturally, some of my images should be warm or cool depending on the conditions. Since color conditions vary greatly and the human eye is awful at making absolute color determinations, how are you going to judge exposure to control warmth if it can be done?
Color balance is done after the fact. Color temperature, thank goodness, has already been fixed by the film manufacturer.