ymc226
Member
Might be overthinking this but since I am still waiting for my Negative Supply scanning kit, so here it goes . . .
Have watched numerous videos regarding capture of the negative by the camera on a stand. I don't remember anyone mentioning the actual camera settings, specifically exposure and focus. Some have mentioned setting aperture to f/8 or f/11.
Does this mean using automatic aperture priority exposure after coning down on the negative to occupy as much of the screen as possible? The negative would be backlit by the light source. Would matrix or similar be better than center weighted or spot? Would one need to bracket exposures? Has anyone blended the captures in Lightroom HDR or is this even beneficial? I don't have a darkroom anymore so will print digitally using ImagePrint to maximize my chances of transferring what I seen on screen to the print. My goal is to avoid the digital look and actually am using 35mm film to emphasize grain and film character. For color, I picked Portra 160 and plan to expose at 100 to get more pastel like effects. Hopefully, the less post processing in LR the better; this being a major reason for me using film again.
In focusing the negatives (uncut roll) does one use autofocus or manually focus once as the negative carrier should remain stable for the captures? I plan to tether with live view and capture capability in LR so won't have to touch the camera after the initial set up. The the imported files will initially be the reversed obviously so is it easy to tell on the screen if the focus is spot on? If not, I could use Negative Lab Pro as a LR plug in to quickly process the files to a positive and assess focus then.
Is there anything else I am missing?
Have watched numerous videos regarding capture of the negative by the camera on a stand. I don't remember anyone mentioning the actual camera settings, specifically exposure and focus. Some have mentioned setting aperture to f/8 or f/11.
Does this mean using automatic aperture priority exposure after coning down on the negative to occupy as much of the screen as possible? The negative would be backlit by the light source. Would matrix or similar be better than center weighted or spot? Would one need to bracket exposures? Has anyone blended the captures in Lightroom HDR or is this even beneficial? I don't have a darkroom anymore so will print digitally using ImagePrint to maximize my chances of transferring what I seen on screen to the print. My goal is to avoid the digital look and actually am using 35mm film to emphasize grain and film character. For color, I picked Portra 160 and plan to expose at 100 to get more pastel like effects. Hopefully, the less post processing in LR the better; this being a major reason for me using film again.
In focusing the negatives (uncut roll) does one use autofocus or manually focus once as the negative carrier should remain stable for the captures? I plan to tether with live view and capture capability in LR so won't have to touch the camera after the initial set up. The the imported files will initially be the reversed obviously so is it easy to tell on the screen if the focus is spot on? If not, I could use Negative Lab Pro as a LR plug in to quickly process the files to a positive and assess focus then.
Is there anything else I am missing?