botty
Member
I have come across alienskin software that does a good job of re-creating 1930/40s kodachrome film. Is there an equivalent what will produce the same era continental produced film such as agfacolor?
Alien Skin's Exposure 4 is the best software for this that I'm aware of.
DXO Filmpack offers films that Exposure 4 doesn't have, but lacks what you're looking for.
http://www.dxo.com/us/photo/filmpack/available_film_looks
There is Imagenomic RealGrain, but again, I think it lacks what you're after.
Same with Nik Colour Efex Pro 4.
OnOne Perfect Effects should still have Kodachrome and Velvia emulation, though they renamed it a few years back. It isn't as good as Exposure 4, and I find Colour Efex Pro 4 to be more useful, as a result I've not upgraded to the latest version.
I think I may be missing one or two obscure options here.
I wasn't aware of VSCO, it looks interesting, it seems to duplicate what's available in Exposure 4 thought. I'd love to see a comparison between the two, as the Instant Pack is quite tempting based on the examples they give.
Is there any software up there, that can simulate the color palette of Lascaux cavemen?
Actually, having thought a bit longer, I would prefer that of Monet.
To this date there's no digital emulation of old Agfacolor or Agfachrome films anywhere. I doubt there will be a rigorously made emulation (like VSCO did for Polaroid or Kodak Portra 400 for instance). It's not impossible but that would demand gigantic efforts of gathering information from Agfa, patents, find some old films, reproduce a bunch of them, find a way to develop them again, etc and process the software digital for VSCO like software. Same problem with Kodachrome or early forms of Kodacolor. I'm sure someone at some point in the future will be passionate and crazy enough to try doing that but it may not happen at all.
I'm obsessed with old color films and other color processes like Carbro, Dufay, etc. I find these colors beautiful and fascinating. So out of this world and familiar at the same time. I reckon the best thing is to try emulating their tone directly in Photoshop of Lightroom. That's what Alien Skin did with Exposure. I think they did an interesting job, but their Kodachromes (1936, 1962, 1974) don't really look like Kodachrome. The 1962 Kodachrome is my favourite form of Kodachrome color but its brownish skin tone is a caricature in AS Exposure. Mad Men TV series shows much more convincing retro orange skin tones than Alien Skin Exposure. Anyway I digress.
Process a digital image according to what you think is a close approximation of Kodachrome 64 or 200, don't sharpen it, give it a pinch of magenta color cast and increase the contrast. Show it to some 'expert photographers' and tell them these are Kodachrome shots...
They'll be getting emotional and nostalgic and will be going through all those fuzzy emotions - provided you can keep a straight face -- then throw some cold water and tell them its digital.
Its good for a laugh, try it.