It was there, we were photo 1 students in High School so expert quality was not needed.If you're determined, maybe. No easy way. Interneg is a nice easy answer in theory, pretty difficult in practice if you expect quality results.
How does that look? Any examples?Or, cross process RA4 paper as described elsewhere.
PE
How does that look? Any examples?
I would never advise using Kodachrome for this!
Just curious, why not? One positive transparency is as good as another, right?
Wow! So my best guess would be that using an inter-negative would give a print with lower resolution but higher color fidelity than cross processing? That doll looks nice though, but I don't know the original colors. The landscape looks good too.
Do we have any examples made with inter-negatives?
A lot of internegatives were made on larger format film, so for those the answer is yes.I know this thread is old, but I want to ask something anyways.
Does the fine grain/resolution of slide film get transfered to the internegative, or is limited to the resolution of the negative (Portra 160) ?
In other words, will I get the colors/saturation of Velvia 50, for example, in a darkroom print when printing from an internegative ?
A lot of internegatives were made on larger format film, so for those the answer is yes.
The purpose made internegative films that used to be available were slow speed, low contrast films designed specifically for the purpose. They were finer grained than any general purpose slide film, and their contrast and colour response was designed to take into account the effects of the copying process.Seems right.
So, how different would the internegative print look from a projected slide ?
If I use the same size negative for copying (35mm to 35mm), will it still retain the details of the slide, since slides usually can be printed at larger sizes, will that be the case ?
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