Michael Firstlight
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I used it and it worked for me.I am looking for a fast and painless easy way to calibrate my color analyzer and get a starting color filtration pack quickly without needing to make multiple test strips. I think I read that one can simply shoot a test frame pointing at a standard photo color chart using an Expodisc, put that neg in the enlarger carrier and then zero out the RGB channels to get a pretty good starting pack that often works for that particular film/paper combination and do slight adjustments from there.. Do I understand this method correctly?
Regards,
Mike
Memories fade just like C prints.
In the 70's Beseler and Unicolor made calibration sets. It was a plastic card with filter sections and a "light integrator"
The integrator was frosted plastic and set under the lens to make a test exposure.
This seems to be what I'm remembering judging from the box but there's no mention of the gizmo on the left side of the picture
that I think is what I'm going on about.
https://www.ebay.com/itm/Unicolor-Color-Darkroom-Primer-Self-Teach-Brand-and-Sealed/202100123365?_trkparms=aid=555017&algo=PL.CASSINI&ao=1&asc=20150817211758&meid=897354140b5847228cfa45bad249e6c4&pid=100507&rk=1&rkt=1&&_trksid=p2045573.c100507.m3226
The one below is exactly what I remembered.
https://www.ebay.com/itm/Vintage-Mi...276775?hash=item361481ad27:g:7Z8AAOSw2gxYx2yQ
OH...yes. I re-read what you wrote..yes you are correct.Cool. So if I understand it, you make a special neutral gray negative best you can with the ExpoDisc (perhaps aimed at midsummer's midday sun on auto), and calibrate the analyzer with that special negative that you keep forever.
Then later whenever you are out shooting, you make a color balance ExpoDisc exposure aimed at the light falling on the scene, and use that ExpoDisc negative to adjust color for a print of that scene.
Right?
The only thing you need to do while you print is make a test strip for density. If I could figure out how to automate that I'd be in heaven.
I'd wonder if the ink colors are consistent from batch to batch.
Cool. So if I understand it, you make a special neutral gray negative best you can with the ExpoDisc (perhaps aimed at midsummer's midday sun on auto), and calibrate the analyzer with that special negative that you keep forever.
Then later whenever you are out shooting, you make a color balance ExpoDisc exposure aimed at the light falling on the scene, and use that ExpoDisc negative to adjust color for a print of that scene.
Right?
Look at what Mick wrote... he clarified a lot.So if you have your 'special gray card' photo and can put that into your enlarger to expose, and then process your paper...all to ensure that your 'entire process'. is well in control.
But then the Expodisk is NOT appropriate to use with any other neg/transparency you may shoot! Take a shot in incandescent rather than daylight, or have it inclusive of any strongly colored object in the scene, and the Expodisk is not beneficial to use for that shot.
Look at what Mick wrote... he clarified a lot.
In any case you point the camera with ExpoDisc at the light source as you would an incident meter, not at the scene.
The OP did explicitly state, "I am looking for a fast and painless easy way to calibrate my color analyzer and get a starting color filtration pack quickly without needing to make multiple test strips."
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