Darryl Roberts
Member
Hi,
What, current stock, of film would you recommend to capture the magical blue hour?
Thank you
What, current stock, of film would you recommend to capture the magical blue hour?
Thank you
All I use these days and photograph once a week at pre-dawn cycles. Does require the usual post processing adjustments like any film I've ever used.Ektachrome E100 is a safe choice
I assume color?
Do you require negative or positive? Will you scan and/or print optically? What are your visual preferences and what's the brightness range you expect to photograph? Are you looking for something middle-of-the-road, or something experimental/odd? What's your budget?
definitely digital captures
Any 4x5 film
Hi,
What, current stock, of film would you recommend to capture the magical blue hour?
Thank you

Velvia 50 4x5 Not manufacturered any longer in 4x5)
Velvia 50 120 more sunset than blue hour.
Trying not to be a smarta*ss but what is the blue hour??? Your local disco bar? If your shooting negative or positive film you need to understand color filters and the temperature of the light. Doesn't matter if it's your disco room, the mountains, an overcast day, or the sunset. Film records color within a spectral band. Filters like 85A, 85B, etc. change the colors recorded. Not good at scientific explanations but a good book on color photography would help a lot. Tiffen used to put out a nice 8x11 soft cover on filters. Good news is that filters for film color control are cheap.
you need to understand color filters and the temperature of the light.
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