I won a cassette of 'Cinestill 50 ASA 'film from USA and had to wait for weather to improve. I gave my Canon A-1 an outing Here is a typical English Bluebell wood.
Years ago, in the days of film, I was taking photos for nursery catalogs. Every time I photographed floss flower ("Ageratum")--which really is blue, in the photos it always turned out pink. I was told--if I recall correctly--that to get them to photograph blue, it took an "infrared cutoff" filter. Don't ask me for filter specifics, I don't know any more than that. Maybe with today's digital cameras and photo shop, you just push a button and make them any color you want. :;o)
Thanks for Comments and Views -- yes, there WERE some scratches on the last few negatives from the film processing machine as I did not develop this one myself. It must be after the prints were done as no scratches on Prints.