Adrian Bacon
Subscriber
I thought I'd post this as a reference. This is not meant to be a "This film vs. that film", but more of an entry point into any discussion that anybody may wish to have. With that, a few things:
1. This is not complete by any means.
2. This is not perfect.
3. I've eliminated as many variables as I realistically could.
4. What you see may not follow what you are used to seeing with respects to a given film.
5. This takes *a lot* of time to do.
So the baseline:
1. The image is a physical print of hue patches spaced 22.5 degrees apart from 0 to 359 degrees.
2. In the HSV cylindrical color model, each patch is printed so that it's 50% saturation and 50% value.
3. Each film shot the same set of patches (the outer ring, ignore the inner ring).
4. Each film used the same camera and lens.
5. Each film used the same light (5600K studio strobe).
6. Each film used the same metering technique.
7. Each film used the same scanner setup.
8. Each image was white balanced so that a correctly exposed 18% grey card is grey with no color cast, the highlights and shadows will fall where they will. No effort was made to correct the highlights or shadows in terms of color cast.
As I get other emulsions, I'll post them.
First up, Kodak's Professional line of film:
Kodak Ektar 100
Kodak Portra 160
Kodak Portra 400
Kodak Portra 800
Next up, Kodak Consumer Films
Kodak ProImage 100
Kodak ColorPlus 200
Kodak Gold 200
Kodak Ultramax 400
Next Up, Fuji Films
Fuji Fujicolor 200
Fuji Superia Xtra 400
Fuji Pro 400H
More will come soon.
1. This is not complete by any means.
2. This is not perfect.
3. I've eliminated as many variables as I realistically could.
4. What you see may not follow what you are used to seeing with respects to a given film.
5. This takes *a lot* of time to do.
So the baseline:
1. The image is a physical print of hue patches spaced 22.5 degrees apart from 0 to 359 degrees.
2. In the HSV cylindrical color model, each patch is printed so that it's 50% saturation and 50% value.
3. Each film shot the same set of patches (the outer ring, ignore the inner ring).
4. Each film used the same camera and lens.
5. Each film used the same light (5600K studio strobe).
6. Each film used the same metering technique.
7. Each film used the same scanner setup.
8. Each image was white balanced so that a correctly exposed 18% grey card is grey with no color cast, the highlights and shadows will fall where they will. No effort was made to correct the highlights or shadows in terms of color cast.
As I get other emulsions, I'll post them.
First up, Kodak's Professional line of film:
Kodak Ektar 100
Kodak Portra 160
Kodak Portra 400
Kodak Portra 800
Next up, Kodak Consumer Films
Kodak ProImage 100
Kodak ColorPlus 200
Kodak Gold 200
Kodak Ultramax 400
Next Up, Fuji Films
Fuji Fujicolor 200
Fuji Superia Xtra 400
Fuji Pro 400H
More will come soon.
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