keyofnight
Member
Hey folks!
After shooting, developing, and scanning a ton of black and white film, I've decided to move on up to color film—starting with C41 negative film. My first attempts at developing color film have been pretty successful, and scanning has been straightforward, but I haven't had much too luck editing out the orange film base in my editor/organizer of choice: Aperture 3. Every adjustment I would made left the highlights and shadows tinted pink and blue respectively. Pretty aggravating.
After a lot of searching RTFMing, APUG asking and thinking, I decided to try a more robust editor—Photoshop CS6—instead. I figured there would be some shortcut adjustment layer or plugin I could use to remove film base color casts without screwing up my highlights and shadow colors. As it turns out, the "photo filter" adjustment layer does exactly what I need it to: I use it to filter out the film base before inverting colors and setting the black point. I can even make an action out of the invert and photo filter steps and batch edit one roll of film at a time.
So what's the problem?
The problem is that I still want to use Aperture 3 to organize smaller edits, use different proofing profiles, manage metadata, share images, etc. I'm not sure how best to do this. I was planning to scan to TIFF files (with no adjustments made in the scanner software), invert and filter out the film base color in Photoshop, import the resultant PSDs in Aperture for metadata and other adjustments. Does Aperture handle PSD files well? What happens if I want to pop back into Photoshop for advanced edits?—does Aperture copy the PSD, or does it allow you to access the original PSD?
Last but not least: what workflow do you guys use for scanning color negatives?
Note: I've put this thread in the "Image Editing" thread because I'm asking a question about editing scans—not about the scanning process itself.
After shooting, developing, and scanning a ton of black and white film, I've decided to move on up to color film—starting with C41 negative film. My first attempts at developing color film have been pretty successful, and scanning has been straightforward, but I haven't had much too luck editing out the orange film base in my editor/organizer of choice: Aperture 3. Every adjustment I would made left the highlights and shadows tinted pink and blue respectively. Pretty aggravating.
After a lot of searching RTFMing, APUG asking and thinking, I decided to try a more robust editor—Photoshop CS6—instead. I figured there would be some shortcut adjustment layer or plugin I could use to remove film base color casts without screwing up my highlights and shadow colors. As it turns out, the "photo filter" adjustment layer does exactly what I need it to: I use it to filter out the film base before inverting colors and setting the black point. I can even make an action out of the invert and photo filter steps and batch edit one roll of film at a time.
So what's the problem?
The problem is that I still want to use Aperture 3 to organize smaller edits, use different proofing profiles, manage metadata, share images, etc. I'm not sure how best to do this. I was planning to scan to TIFF files (with no adjustments made in the scanner software), invert and filter out the film base color in Photoshop, import the resultant PSDs in Aperture for metadata and other adjustments. Does Aperture handle PSD files well? What happens if I want to pop back into Photoshop for advanced edits?—does Aperture copy the PSD, or does it allow you to access the original PSD?
Last but not least: what workflow do you guys use for scanning color negatives?
Note: I've put this thread in the "Image Editing" thread because I'm asking a question about editing scans—not about the scanning process itself.