alienmeatsack
Well-known
I personally like the look that some films give when over exposed a little. Some of my expired films like Kodak Gold 100 work wonderfully if you shoot them at 50. They go from "normal view of the world and a little grainy" to "feels like this was shot in the 80s and grainy".
I think it's really up to you, your preferences, the film being used, it's age and how its developed. I do try to shoot a little over as others have said, exposing for the darks and shooting for the lights, so my shadows have detail. I don't always have this option when I handhold in less then perfect lighting conditions though.
If there's a particular film you use a lot, take a roll out and test shoot it. Do a normal exposure, then do a few 1/3rd or 1/2 stops over exposure of the same shot. Then see what you get. If you like it, use it that way.
I think it's really up to you, your preferences, the film being used, it's age and how its developed. I do try to shoot a little over as others have said, exposing for the darks and shooting for the lights, so my shadows have detail. I don't always have this option when I handhold in less then perfect lighting conditions though.
If there's a particular film you use a lot, take a roll out and test shoot it. Do a normal exposure, then do a few 1/3rd or 1/2 stops over exposure of the same shot. Then see what you get. If you like it, use it that way.