So something is niggling me and I'd really like to get some opinions on it, especially for posting on this forum.
I have just started to shoot with film and once I've developed it, I scan in the negatives, edit in Photoshop and then upload to whatever streams I need to.
My question is this:
What is considered 'unethical digital post production' for film scans? (I've just read the guidelines on Portfolios and it got me worried.)
The scans from my first roll of film lacked so much contrast and generally looked awful, even though the negatives actually look quite well exposed/developed. I shot on Ilford FP4 125 using a Canon EOS 650 35mm camera. I developed using Ilford DD-x, Ilfostop, Rapid Fixer and Rinse.
In Photoshop I'm duplicating the original layer and setting the blend mode to Soft Light to give it a decent contrast fix. Then adding a little more contrast with a contrast layer, some light dodging & burning (not always), and sometimes a black solid layer with a Soft Light blend mode and adjusting its opacity level.
Am I completely overdoing it? And is this the sort of thing which will have me burned at the stake if I post the images on APUG? (slightly kidding but, not really).
Another question:
If I am overdoing the digital post processing, how do I get images with high contrast? Am I using the wrong film? Should I underexpose? I am a complete beginner with film and I have no plans to give up on it. There is too much I love about it. If anyone can recommend a good book I will gladly go away and read it.
I've attached an example scan and processed image to show you what I'm ranting on about.
Cheers
Jay
I have just started to shoot with film and once I've developed it, I scan in the negatives, edit in Photoshop and then upload to whatever streams I need to.
My question is this:
What is considered 'unethical digital post production' for film scans? (I've just read the guidelines on Portfolios and it got me worried.)
The scans from my first roll of film lacked so much contrast and generally looked awful, even though the negatives actually look quite well exposed/developed. I shot on Ilford FP4 125 using a Canon EOS 650 35mm camera. I developed using Ilford DD-x, Ilfostop, Rapid Fixer and Rinse.
In Photoshop I'm duplicating the original layer and setting the blend mode to Soft Light to give it a decent contrast fix. Then adding a little more contrast with a contrast layer, some light dodging & burning (not always), and sometimes a black solid layer with a Soft Light blend mode and adjusting its opacity level.
Am I completely overdoing it? And is this the sort of thing which will have me burned at the stake if I post the images on APUG? (slightly kidding but, not really).
Another question:
If I am overdoing the digital post processing, how do I get images with high contrast? Am I using the wrong film? Should I underexpose? I am a complete beginner with film and I have no plans to give up on it. There is too much I love about it. If anyone can recommend a good book I will gladly go away and read it.
I've attached an example scan and processed image to show you what I'm ranting on about.
Cheers
Jay


