Color corrective masking has been practicted for decades in relation to color carbon, color carbro, dye-transfer, printing for press and heck, even negative film.
In case you're unfamilliar, the idea is to compensate for the inadequacies of the dyes/pigments used in these processes.
For example, the cyan dye for dye-transfer has "unwanted absorption" of green (IIRC) and the magenta has unwanted absorption of blue. In other words, they deviate from the theoretically perfect dyes that transmit all blue/green and red/blue respectively.
Masking works by superimposing a weaker (less dense) positive from the green separation with the red separation negative (the cyan printer). This effectively makes up for the unwanted absorption by subtracting out green information in the cyan printer, compensating for the unwanted absorption
(it's possible I've gotten some of the specifics mixed up, but that's the general idea. there is no shortage of literature that explains this better than I)
Anywho, I'm wondering if anyone is doing this with digital negatives? Particularly since there are so many people doing tri-color gum, it seems like this is something that should be discussed more, but as far as I can tell it is not. The result is much purer and more realistic rendering of color. It is considered a necessary step in these high-end color processes.
So, what would be the best way to go about doing this? I'm relatively unfamiliar with digital processing, and don't even own photoshop. Heresy, I know, but I think that this technique would be of interest to many people, and I suspect that the effort would be trivial in comparison to the pay off.
In case you're unfamilliar, the idea is to compensate for the inadequacies of the dyes/pigments used in these processes.
For example, the cyan dye for dye-transfer has "unwanted absorption" of green (IIRC) and the magenta has unwanted absorption of blue. In other words, they deviate from the theoretically perfect dyes that transmit all blue/green and red/blue respectively.
Masking works by superimposing a weaker (less dense) positive from the green separation with the red separation negative (the cyan printer). This effectively makes up for the unwanted absorption by subtracting out green information in the cyan printer, compensating for the unwanted absorption
(it's possible I've gotten some of the specifics mixed up, but that's the general idea. there is no shortage of literature that explains this better than I)
Anywho, I'm wondering if anyone is doing this with digital negatives? Particularly since there are so many people doing tri-color gum, it seems like this is something that should be discussed more, but as far as I can tell it is not. The result is much purer and more realistic rendering of color. It is considered a necessary step in these high-end color processes.
So, what would be the best way to go about doing this? I'm relatively unfamiliar with digital processing, and don't even own photoshop. Heresy, I know, but I think that this technique would be of interest to many people, and I suspect that the effort would be trivial in comparison to the pay off.



