I'm quite lost on your abbreviations...
Photos look good; color balance is off. Quite probably not a problem in the creation so much as in the scanning.
The exposures and the contrast look fine. Who did the processing, and how were these images created? They appear to have a reddish cast -- which might not be in the negatives. What film was used at what ISO?
@Pedroga before you invert your negative, are you setting the white point to the transparent base of the film (for example the space between frames) so that the white balance corrects the color mask? The colors in the sky and clouds in my scans looked similar to yours until I learned that "trick". Let me know if that doesn't make sense and I'll show you some visual examples.
So, this is my complaint to the lab, a matter I explicitly wrote to requesting that they send me the scans without the color inversion, which unfortunately did not happen.
So, this is my complaint to the lab, a matter I explicitly wrote to requesting that they send me the scans without the color inversion, which unfortunately did not happen.
Photos look good; color balance is off. Quite probably not a problem in the creation so much as in the scanning.
Tell them you want them scanned as if they were slides - that might work better.
Oh! I didn't realize this was a lab scan. That makes sense then that they may not have a profile for Lucky film (my lab's scans of Harman Phoenix are terrible too). If you enjoy the film photography process I highly recommend buying the equipment to scan it yourself so you can control these things! Some labs are better than others, but ultimately with a lab scan you are no longer the editor of your photo.
I agree with color balance being off. I took the liberty of altering a photo to look more 'neutral' in color balance. Having an 18% gray card visible in an image to judge neutrality and brightness would permit accuracy of reproduction after correction during postprocessing, rather than relying upon my 'guess'.
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If I can get the photos without them being inverted or in "flat" scan mode, I'll want to learn how to do what you did, it turned out amazing.
That day the sky was super cloudy at sunset... I think that's why it came out purple in the lab photo.
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