"Anti"-trichromes

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As I imagine most people on this forum would know, a trichrome is when you use a red, green, and blue filter to expose three frames of black and white panchromatic film, which you can then combine together to create a colour image.

But what about antitrichromes? From the moment I found out about trichromes I wondered if the opposite was possible—three B&W images on single frame of colour film using filters—but wasn't able to really find anything online... I mean, I don't even know what to search for, if this concept has a name I wouldn't know how to find it.

But in principle it seems you could expose a single colour frame three times with different images filtered with R/G/B and then scan and extract each channel in photoshop to have separate B&W images. I imagine that given imperfections in various things here (the filters, the chemicals, the scanning setup, etc.), what you'd end up with is a muddy/messy result where channels bleed into each other a bit... but I bet it would look interesting. The orange mask might be a problem... maybe on Aero 100 cross processed in E6?
 

fdonadio

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You mean “anti” as in shooting through cyan, magenta and yellow filters (instead of RGB)?

I would risk saying that you could get these in Photoshop and use them as channels in a CMYK image. Heck, you could even shoot a frame without any filters and use it as the K channel.

It’s either that, or my brain is not working good
 
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You mean “anti” as in shooting through cyan, magenta and yellow filters (instead of RGB)?

I would risk saying that you could get these in Photoshop and use them as channels in a CMYK image. Heck, you could even shoot a frame without any filters and use it as the K channel.

It’s either that, or my brain is not working good

Noo I meant shooting three different images onto a single frame and extracting them out.

Mockup I made in Photoshop:
1753120304900.png


From which you can extract three B&W images:
1753120322839.png

1753120343656.png

1753120363032.png
 

koraks

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But in principle it seems you could expose a single colour frame three times with different images filtered with R/G/B and then scan and extract each channel in photoshop to have separate B&W images. I imagine that given imperfections in various things here (the filters, the chemicals, the scanning setup, etc.), what you'd end up with is a muddy/messy result where channels bleed into each other a bit... but I bet it would look interesting. The orange mask might be a problem... maybe on Aero 100 cross processed in E6?
Your reasoning is sound as far as I can tell. Yes, there will be crosstalk between the images for the reasons you mention. And yes, it'll look interesting! The orange mask is not really a problem if you scan the film. Give it a try!
 

OAPOli

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Attic Darkroom gave it a try @3:14:



He calls it "reverse trichrome" and the conclusion is that is sometimes works but most of the time it doesn't.
 
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