rogue_designer
Reciprocity Failure
Shooting 160 NC and VC in 120 and 4x5 - well... the dynamic range and color saturation is perfect for architectural work. I don't have to shoot HDR, because the film holds what I need.
It all comes down to what you are shooting and why. I have yet to find a digital solution that offers me the range and resolution of large format color negative film.
For me the only advantage to digital is a workflow one. I don't have to have it processed.
But I can't make you appreciate it. If it was the right solution for you, you probably already would.
It all comes down to what you are shooting and why. I have yet to find a digital solution that offers me the range and resolution of large format color negative film.
For me the only advantage to digital is a workflow one. I don't have to have it processed.
But I can't make you appreciate it. If it was the right solution for you, you probably already would.
manfromh
I'm not there
I'm not much of a color fan myself either. I think it's harder to get a good color image, than it is to get a good b&w image.
Heres one image though, which is one of my favourite color shots I've taken:
This was shot on Superia 400 I believe
Heres one image though, which is one of my favourite color shots I've taken:

This was shot on Superia 400 I believe
sockeyed
Well-known
I'm one of those weirdos who really enjoys shooting colour film in my rangefinders. I would shoot a lot more of it if it wasn't so expensive compared with home-rolled and processed B&W, and wasn't so difficult to scan well. In the hands of a masterful darkroom printer, prints from colour negs can be gorgeous, and emulsions like the new Kodak 400VS are stellar. But these days it's generally B&W in my RF's and colour on my Canon 5D.
Bessa R3A, CV 25/4, Fuji Reala
Bessa R3A, CV 40/1.4 SC, Fuji Reala
Bessa R3A, CV 25/4, Fuji NPH
Bessa R3M, CV 50/1.5, Fuji NPZ
Bessa R3A, CV 25/4, Fuji Reala

Bessa R3A, CV 40/1.4 SC, Fuji Reala

Bessa R3A, CV 25/4, Fuji NPH

Bessa R3M, CV 50/1.5, Fuji NPZ

Teus
Thijs Deschildre
iso800 is far too grainy for me. I already struggle with low-iso color films because the grain is quite murkyI only shoot Reala and NPZ, and since Reala is too flat for you, which it is really, here goes NPZ
it's my pleasure if you liked the set. its from the 2007 World jamboree, when we celebrated a 100 years of scouting. I was fulltime photographer for the Belgian contingent. it was a marvelous job, and I've seen every corner of the world villageteus- a bit off topic, but I have to ask. Is that the World Scout Jamboree or World Explorer Jamboree?
I'm a proud Eagle Scout and just had to ask- especially in light of seeing females at the Jamboree. I quite enjoyed looking through those and appreciate your sharing them here.
wow, just as some other links, this is breathtaking. as I discovered recently while doing nature macros, my eyes aren't trained well enough to compose with different colors. I'll definately shoot some color film again. I'm going on a small trip Sunday and might shoot some color then.So.
This is a shot that only really works in colour:
As is this:
a lot of people get very nice colors, but this appears to be under hard (or early) sunlight?
Teus
Thijs Deschildre
ahaa!
this could explain my murky tonality and grain
this could explain my murky tonality and grain
Extra exposure on C41 normally gives better tonality and a bigger cushion against underexposure (= better tonality again), and finer 'grain' (dye clouds) at the price of reduced sharpness.
Extra exposure on conventional B+W generally gives better tonality but coarser grain and reduced sharpness.
marke
Well-known
I recently bought a roll of 160VC, just to get away from the Fuji stuff.
Why are you trying to get away from Fuji? Has he been chasing you?
Seriously, I'm curious.
Teus
Thijs Deschildre
maybe another brand works better for me.Why are you trying to get away from Fuji? Has he been chasing you?
Seriously, I'm curious.![]()
marke
Well-known
maybe another brand works better for me.
Yes, that much I understand. But again, I ask why? Please share what you don't care about Fuji. I'm just trying to learn what some people prefer about some films as opposed to others.
Thank you.
Kevin
Rainbow Bridge
The pictures in this thread are gorgeous!
wray
Well-known
This one wouldn't be quite the same in b&w.

Teus
Thijs Deschildre
good colors, not too much of a color cast, skin tones look OK to me. what tech details?This one wouldn't be quite the same in b&w.
oh, sorry, I even don't know myself. Fuji would be a bit too neutral and cold balanced, and maybe kodak gives me better tonality. Tomorrow I'll know what my roll of Reala looks like, with bracketed exposures, and under nicer lightYes, that much I understand. But again, I ask why? Please share what you don't care about Fuji. I'm just trying to learn what some people prefer about some films as opposed to others.
Leighgion
Bovine Overseer
Don't know if my C41 work will convince anybody of anything other than that I haven't shot a lot of it, but here's a few.
Nikon FE2, 24mm f2.8 AIS on Fuji Reala
Olympus XA w/Fuji Superia 200
Nikon FE, 24mm f2.8 AIS on Fuji Superia 100
Nikon FE, 75-150mm f3.5 E on Fuji Superia 200
For a little perspective, here's an a different shot I took of the mannequins in B&W:
Nikon FE2, 50mm f1.4 AIS on Kodak BW400CN
Nikon FE2, 24mm f2.8 AIS on Fuji Reala

Olympus XA w/Fuji Superia 200

Nikon FE, 24mm f2.8 AIS on Fuji Superia 100

Nikon FE, 75-150mm f3.5 E on Fuji Superia 200

For a little perspective, here's an a different shot I took of the mannequins in B&W:
Nikon FE2, 50mm f1.4 AIS on Kodak BW400CN

Teus
Thijs Deschildre
hah, looks like we got a lot of the same equipment. photos look OK to me, the second having a strange color cast.D
24mm f2.8 AIS on Fuji Reala
Olympus XA w/Fuji Superia 200
75-150mm f3.5 E on Fuji Superia 200
Leighgion
Bovine Overseer
hah, looks like we got a lot of the same equipment. photos look OK to me, the second having a strange color cast.
Heh, got all that too, do you?
It's good stuff, but I find my XA to be a mixed bag. It's so small and light I have trouble not twitching when I trip the shutter and I end up having a lot of shots where I'm tilting the camera and not noticing.
That shot at the docks may have been suffering from some veiling flare, but it's actually a fairly accurate representation of what the light was like.
TheHub
Well-known
Kodak Super Gold 400 for me, all the way: http://www.flickr.com/photos/nagoya_boston/tags/kodaksupergold400/
A 20 pack was something like $25 over here. GREAT film, doesn't blow-out on bright days and (with steady hands) is also great for low-light shots.
Ultra Color is 2x the price and just doesn't spin my propeller.
As others have shown, Fuji Reala is excellent, too.
I rarely shoot slide film these days. I've photod my city to death, so I only use it for sunsets and vacations. I don't shoot digital at all.
A 20 pack was something like $25 over here. GREAT film, doesn't blow-out on bright days and (with steady hands) is also great for low-light shots.
Ultra Color is 2x the price and just doesn't spin my propeller.
As others have shown, Fuji Reala is excellent, too.
I rarely shoot slide film these days. I've photod my city to death, so I only use it for sunsets and vacations. I don't shoot digital at all.
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maddoc
... likes film again.
I just developed my first film of Kodak UC400 last night. Seems having turned out well, so I am going to try some pushed UC400 next (up to 1600 ISO). Not sure how grain and colors will look like but I see it as an experiment and self-developing C41 is fast and easy. 
Teus
Thijs Deschildre
OK, got my reala. EI 50 helps a bit, but results are fairly poor to my eyes. low sharpness and I can't get tonality right, even with editing. I probably need some modern glass: the old collapsible summicron's colors are ugly, my J-12 performs a bit better (and warmer).
samples from a dual scan III with auto exposure: http://satsuki.nl/teus/photos/tech/reala/reala.jpg
real world photos:
this leaves me fairly unhappy, digital captures require way less editing to look snappy. I should try some "ultra color" or so, in my SLR with 50mm f/1.8 AF (or f/1.2 with older coatings).what do you people think?
samples from a dual scan III with auto exposure: http://satsuki.nl/teus/photos/tech/reala/reala.jpg
real world photos:

this leaves me fairly unhappy, digital captures require way less editing to look snappy. I should try some "ultra color" or so, in my SLR with 50mm f/1.8 AF (or f/1.2 with older coatings).what do you people think?
Sisyphus
Sisyphus
Color, in general can be amazing in and of itself. I am the same way--i have been photographing with b&w film for decades, and even travelling to a few of the same places, and all in b&w. This past summer, I returned to one of my favorite places, and photographed in color, as well as b&w.
In order to maximize the color outdoors, I primarily photographed during the golden hours, early morning and early evening as the sun was setting. In doors I was really paying attention to the color of the interiors and to the light falling inside people's homes.
I was using Kodachrome 64 and 200, and I was kodak 100 NC (color Negative film).
Also, one way to get inspired about color is to look at some books by Richard Misrach, Joel Sternfield, Alex Webb, and Steve McCurry of course, and even some of the color work by Harry Calahan. I think it will give a different perspective about what you can do with color, but like anything, it is a different way of seeing, which takes practice.
I would also try slightly overexposing the negative just a bit.
If you are interested I have one of color image on my blog.
In order to maximize the color outdoors, I primarily photographed during the golden hours, early morning and early evening as the sun was setting. In doors I was really paying attention to the color of the interiors and to the light falling inside people's homes.
I was using Kodachrome 64 and 200, and I was kodak 100 NC (color Negative film).
Also, one way to get inspired about color is to look at some books by Richard Misrach, Joel Sternfield, Alex Webb, and Steve McCurry of course, and even some of the color work by Harry Calahan. I think it will give a different perspective about what you can do with color, but like anything, it is a different way of seeing, which takes practice.
I would also try slightly overexposing the negative just a bit.
If you are interested I have one of color image on my blog.
IK13
Established
The colors are dull, but I'm not sure that you have low sharpness there. Can't really judge from this size, but it seems to me that what you have is low contrast. And this IS what you'd want if you are to scan - you can increase contrast as much as you want in PS, but it doesn't work quite the same the other way. That's why I love Reala - I get shots even in the middle of the day (and this means a lot of sun here in SoCal).
My advise is to scan to raw/linear tiff, then do all the adjustments in PS. Keep the changes and apply them next time. It might not be spot-on, but will save you mileage.
As a point of comparison you might want to find a place that uses Noritsu or Frontier (I've got good results from both) machines and scan it there once - just for reference.
btw - I've heard people complaining about the C-41 colors out of Minolta scanners (never about the resolution!), and most seem to get better results with Vuescan.
My advise is to scan to raw/linear tiff, then do all the adjustments in PS. Keep the changes and apply them next time. It might not be spot-on, but will save you mileage.
As a point of comparison you might want to find a place that uses Noritsu or Frontier (I've got good results from both) machines and scan it there once - just for reference.
btw - I've heard people complaining about the C-41 colors out of Minolta scanners (never about the resolution!), and most seem to get better results with Vuescan.
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