IpseLux
Member
It’s been decades since I did color printing. I remember it being very color sensitive, and quite a challenge to nail down proper color rendering.
All was done with trial and error, looking at prints thru filters.
I’m quite disappointed with my local lab work. And I’m trying to work out solutions to this.
One is to shoot slide film. Easy enough.
But at $25 a roll for E100, and the rarer opportunities that I shoot images where color is the protagonist, I’d like to attempt option two. Overexpose the image and ask for a treatment that is popular now, and that I assume they could do well.
Now I realize the best thing would be to ask them, instead of you all. But given the big mess up they’ve already committed in previous prints, I thought I’d get a second opinion, and one before my first, if that makes sense.
How does one achieve that dreamy pastel look with Fuji print film. Overexpose 1 or two stops?
And also, and most importantly, hence my question in this forum, what instructions must I give my lab for them to better print my images?
Correct me if I’m wrong, but is it process normally? Do I need to add reduce contrast at scanning? Or anything else.
Thank you before hand.
I’ve got a couple of rolls on two cameras. One I’m going to bracket, to see what’s going on with their printing. But the other I’d like to try as a whole, to get a sense of how it all looks with my normal shooting style.
Thanks again.
All was done with trial and error, looking at prints thru filters.
I’m quite disappointed with my local lab work. And I’m trying to work out solutions to this.
One is to shoot slide film. Easy enough.
But at $25 a roll for E100, and the rarer opportunities that I shoot images where color is the protagonist, I’d like to attempt option two. Overexpose the image and ask for a treatment that is popular now, and that I assume they could do well.
Now I realize the best thing would be to ask them, instead of you all. But given the big mess up they’ve already committed in previous prints, I thought I’d get a second opinion, and one before my first, if that makes sense.
How does one achieve that dreamy pastel look with Fuji print film. Overexpose 1 or two stops?
And also, and most importantly, hence my question in this forum, what instructions must I give my lab for them to better print my images?
Correct me if I’m wrong, but is it process normally? Do I need to add reduce contrast at scanning? Or anything else.
Thank you before hand.
I’ve got a couple of rolls on two cameras. One I’m going to bracket, to see what’s going on with their printing. But the other I’d like to try as a whole, to get a sense of how it all looks with my normal shooting style.
Thanks again.
)
