Biggles
My cup runneth amok.
I may have people coming in from urban Yurrup this summer, and I plan to take them to a big blue lake surrounded by bright green trees under azure skies and puffy clouds. I figure I should give them some color snaps to remember the place by.
Back when I last shot color (summer of 1998), the acknowledged king of foliage color rendering was Fuji. I used quite a few rolls of NPH that year. Have things changed? What's today's knee-jerk answer for deep, bright, slightly oversaturated trees and water, in the 400-800 speed range?
Back when I last shot color (summer of 1998), the acknowledged king of foliage color rendering was Fuji. I used quite a few rolls of NPH that year. Have things changed? What's today's knee-jerk answer for deep, bright, slightly oversaturated trees and water, in the 400-800 speed range?
einolu
Well-known
you could use npz or you could push some slide film if youre feeling adventurous (provia 400, expensive but pushes really well, 1600 easily). i haven't seen many snaps taken with superia 1600 (cheap on ebay these days) but the ones I have seen look good.
DavidH
Overweight and over here
Have had excellent results with Fuji Pro 400H - and it scans very well too...
Iskra 2
Kodachrome Rules!
The newer Kodak Max800 works for me when the lights are low. Kodak Gold 200 for all the rest.
KM800 Day:
KM800 Night:
Regards.
KM800 Day:

KM800 Night:

Regards.
uhligfd
Well-known
Kodak 400 UC. Visit your local Walmart for a couple of 3 packs of 36s.
40oz
...
There's probably already more than one good answer here, but Kodak Max400 has made me happy in the past. For bright sunny days, Kodak Gold 100/200 (Kodak Bright Sun/Bright Sun & Flash some places).
Biggles
My cup runneth amok.
Thank you all for the suggestions. Quite interesting to hear people recommending Kodak for ponds & shrubbery.
DavidH
Overweight and over here
I forgot Fuji Pro800Z...very nice...but only used it for industrial style shots - not nature. There's a couple of shots in my gallery taken in the tunnel network at CERN with 800Z...
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Michiel
Established
Nokton48
Veteran
Don't know where Palookaville is, but I like buying Fuji Press 800 in the twenty-roll propaks from B&H. Works out to about $2.40-ish for a roll of high-speed 36 exposure.
NickTrop
Veteran
If colors matter more than speed:
400 Speed: another vote for Kodak UC Professional. Just an outstanding print film. Colors pop but remain natural. Best color print in 400 I've ever used.
If speed matters more than color:
Fuji 800 or 1600 films (prefer these to Kodak's higher speed offerings...) commercial or pro grade.
Kodak for low speed color print, Fuji for high speed color print.
400 Speed: another vote for Kodak UC Professional. Just an outstanding print film. Colors pop but remain natural. Best color print in 400 I've ever used.
If speed matters more than color:
Fuji 800 or 1600 films (prefer these to Kodak's higher speed offerings...) commercial or pro grade.
Kodak for low speed color print, Fuji for high speed color print.
Biggles
My cup runneth amok.
Thanks, folks. I'll post any worthwhile results sometime after Labor Day.
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