What you are seeing is the automatic colour correction doing its best to correct for the colour. When they say "no colour correction" they are mis-stating the result. A better phrase would be no over-ride of the automatic colour correction.Oh yeah, and I took ‘em the negatives to three different processors. On the third they let me watch as they scanned it raw- no color correction. Each came out exactly the same, sadly.
What you are seeing is the automatic colour correction doing its best to correct for the colour. When they say "no colour correction" they are mis-stating the result. A better phrase would be no over-ride of the automatic colour correction.
Portra 800 is quite capable of handling mixed light sources, but it would do an even better job if you did some on-camera filtering.
And you really need a better scanning resource.
If you're wanting no post processing due to not wanting to manipulate as much as you can with digital, rather than because of less effort or post processing is no fun, consider the fact that in the darkroom you can affect colour cast by changing the filtering. If you're scanning I don't see the issue with fixing your white balance digitally apart from it perhaps being a bit harder.
No.Hm, so in this instance a warm filter- say a Hoya 81A, would do the trick? I feel like that would eliminate the blue cast but not totally sure about the green.
Ah, okay. Now I got it. Looks like it’s time to invest in a scanner, then. I may experiment with using a cooling filter, because it seems like, perhaps with less to auto-correct, maybe the scanner wouldn’t over-correct so sharply. Although in any case it sounds like work needs to be done in post anyway so... Might as well invest in a scanner. Thanks for all the info.No.
The film doesn't have a blue cast. The film has an over-all red-yellow cast, due to the light. When the automatic scanning software interacts with the film, it tries to correct that cast by adding blue and cyan. Unfortunately, it over-corrects, leaving you with too much blue and cyan in the digital image.
In almost all cases, commercial scanners use automatic systems to set colour balance and exposure in the digital results.
If you take film photos under mixed light sources, and have the results scanned with those automatic system reliant commercial scanners, almost all of those scanners will give results that require manual intervention in order to get acceptable results. A good scanner operator will make those manual adjustments. Otherwise, you will need to do them yourself in a digital post-processing environment.
I suspect you are not going to want to hear this and it may stem from my being easily pleased but I see very little wrong with the pictures. I suspect what the film saw in the first frame is an accurate representation of the light as it was. Matt has done a great job of making the colours appear brighter and much warmer that it may have been but is this how the place looks in reality?
The second one looks very accurate to me as does the third. The fourth has lost shadow detail, I'll concede, but this is because the people are set against the bright window. If you want greater detail in the people then in darkroom terms you can "dodge " the people for some of the exposure which might bring our more detail in their bodies and faces or have a look at a thread by someone called halfaman where he has achieved the same effect by digital masking. You could next time expose more for the faces "in camera" this will give more detail and lighten the inside of the restaurant but the outside detail may and probably will suffer - it will be over-exposed.
I do not think there is anything wrong with the film or the processing involved.
pentaxuser
View attachment 205829 View attachment 205830 View attachment 205831 View attachment 205832
Thanks for the input.
I suppose the desire to keep my photo manipulation as in-camera as possible is just a preference. I did actually play around with the rudimentary iPhone cast-correction and I found that I do like the way each photo benefits from a slight warming.
I feel like the first picture posted above is just going to have a million different casts and I’ve made peace with that. My only annoyance with the other three however, is the blue tone (which I presume is coming from the window- which sounds like adding a filter would help correct that to a degree). I think for my next shoot then, i’ll bring an 81A for the shots mainly lit by the window and a Tungsten-correcting lens for shots closer to the interior light sources like the ones in this post (same roll, Portra 800, early afternoon). I’ve heard the 80A would be a good idea for Tungsten correction- In your opinion, would the 80A be a good idea for getting rid of these casts? Or would there be a better filter?
Thank you so much for your help.
I'm going to keep this brief, Portra 800 is absolutely fine for mixed lighting conditions: the problem is getting a colour balance that looks convincing when both daylight & artificial light sources are in shot. As much as people are advocating for correction filters, you might be surprised to learn that even when printing by fully analogue means, it's perfectly possible to correct daylight balanced film to a convincing level for having been shot under tungsten (even domestic sub 3000k bulbs) & vice versa.
Anyway, unless you gel the windows to match the interior or replace all the interior bulbs with practicals to match the exterior, it's a problem you'll run up against - though if you're prepared to do a little light Photoshop work (or make some correction masks for darkroom printing) it can also be evened out pretty easily. The even easier solution is to make compositional choices that don't force hard work at the post production stage...
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?