squirrel$$$bandit
Veteran
schow suggested in a previous thread that we start some kind of xproc silde film scanning project, since it's kind of a challenge to make this work. So here are some of today's results and how I got them. Please add your own techniques and photos!
Film: Fuji Velvia, exposed at 64.
Developer: C41 home dev kit.
Scanner: Coolscan 5000ED.
Software: Vuescan.
Settings:
Color Balance = White Balance
Media = Image
Black point = 0.1
White point = 0.1
Curve low = 0.25
Curve high = 0.7
Afterward, I turned the negative to a positive with IrfanView, then adjusted exposure, blacks, recovery, and clarity in Lightroom. I also sharpened but will probably undo that later, it looks weird at 100%.
Pics:
Film: Fuji Velvia, exposed at 64.
Developer: C41 home dev kit.
Scanner: Coolscan 5000ED.
Software: Vuescan.
Settings:
Color Balance = White Balance
Media = Image
Black point = 0.1
White point = 0.1
Curve low = 0.25
Curve high = 0.7
Afterward, I turned the negative to a positive with IrfanView, then adjusted exposure, blacks, recovery, and clarity in Lightroom. I also sharpened but will probably undo that later, it looks weird at 100%.
Pics:




squirrel$$$bandit
Veteran
I should add that going sledding with my kids is the photographic situation that a DSLR with tele zoom is made for. So of course I left mine in the drawer and brought a manual focus film rangefinder with a 50.
dmr
Registered Abuser
This blog entry tells most of the story:
http://omababe.blogspot.com/2007/10/cross-processing-bean.html
Fuji Sensia, processed in a drug store Fuji Frontier, with Kodak chemistry, I believe. Scanned in the K-M SD IV as color positives, inverted and tweaked in Photoshop.
http://omababe.blogspot.com/2007/10/cross-processing-bean.html
Fuji Sensia, processed in a drug store Fuji Frontier, with Kodak chemistry, I believe. Scanned in the K-M SD IV as color positives, inverted and tweaked in Photoshop.
schow
Well-known
There's that good ol' red casted velvia!
Say, is that Velvia or Velvia F version?
I didn't know "regular" Vevlia has the redish cast.
I'll try and add more about my experience with velvia during the weekend.
Happy Holidays, folks.
Say, is that Velvia or Velvia F version?
I didn't know "regular" Vevlia has the redish cast.
I'll try and add more about my experience with velvia during the weekend.
Happy Holidays, folks.
unclescarMT
Established
squirrel$$$bandit
Veteran
squirrel$$$bandit
Veteran
There's that good ol' red casted velvia!
Say, is that Velvia or Velvia F version?
I didn't know "regular" Vevlia has the redish cast.
It's "regular" RVP100.
unclescarMT
Established
right, of course. scanned as negative w/ epson V500. I used the epson software, w/ no correction. I did do some adjustment in PS to boost the contrast some and adjusted the levels a bit.
Keith
The best camera is one that still works!
The only way I've been able to get acceptable consistent results is by scanning as a positive ... any other way seems fraught with the danger of the scanner's software taking over to a point, even though dissabled as much as is possible. The perfect x-processed scan to me is one with an unusual colour balance but not with a cast dominating the entire image.
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