N
nwcanonman
Guest
It is good to hear that Big Yellow is still working on their films. Most of the film-news in the last few years has been mostly Fuji, but competition is good for us as photographers ~ ; - )
Rated box speed is a fine place to start. See what your negs look like; examine the shadows. In general, color neg films have considerable tolerance for overexposure, and a bit of that is likely to benefit tonality and apparent grain especially in the darker areas. For Fuji NPS 160 I set my meters to 100; for NPH 400 I set 250, and for NPZ 800 I put the meters at 500... works well for me, YMMV as they say.thelovecollect said:what speed do you rate these films at?
and what speed for fuji negs?
Akiva, yes! Fortunately, today all color neg films and chromogenic B&W use the standard C-41 color neg process. The actual chemistry may differ very slightly among manufacturers but the difference in results is hard to detect. Years ago Agfa had their own proprietary color neg process, quite incompatible with Kodak's C-41, and it seems to me Konica might have had something different too.kshapero said:Is Porta UC/VC developed C-41?
Quite a coincidence: Portra 160NC has been my mainstay color film for several years now, and I've been using a Minolta 5400 scanner almost since its release; the characteristics of both film and scanner dovetail amazingly (almost eerily) well...the scans rarely need more than a light tweaking in PS, and the color is simply right-on to my eyes. My only quibble (and not a major one) has been with grain: I've long felt a film rated at this speed should possess somewhat finer grain than 160NC has offered up to now, and it appears that Rochester, even at this late date and in spite of everything it's been dealing with lately, has answered the call. And if this improvement has truly spread throughout the Portra line, it might lure me back to the 800-speed stuff (I've been mostly working with Fuji in that realm).Tom Diaz said:Great news! Portra 160NC and 400NC are my favorite films. I get them developed (anywhere!) and scanned-to-CD for pretty cheap. The good pictures I scan with my desktop Konica-Minolta Scan Elite 5400 scanner. That is a great machine and scans the negatives with no wacky profiles and no other strange results. Too bad they got out of the business, but you can still get one on ebay....
amateriat said:My only quibble (and not a major one) has been with grain: I've long felt a film rated at this speed should possess somewhat finer grain than 160NC has offered up to now, and it appears that Rochester, even at this late date and in spite of everything it's been dealing with lately, has answered the call.
- Barrett
Nope. The one thing that matters (but to a somewhat lesser degree than, say, E6) is a lab running fresh chemistry in a decently-maintained (read: clean) machine...and, yeah, someone who knows how to decipher a control strip. Your odds are obviously better at a pro lab with a dip/dunk machine, but an aware minilab operator will give good results as well (I've worked machines in both environments).Nachkebia said:Btw does it matter if you develope kodak film in fuji lab and visa versa? I think my quick supermarket lab cracks up my color negative films![]()