FreXxXenstein
Member
Hello everyone!
I've been reading for a long time here on APUG, but never posted here.
But now I have a question.
In about two weeks I'll shoot a friend of mine. Not sure yet if 135 film or 120 film, but it shouldn't matter.
She wants to show her kimonos, and now I'm unsure which film to use.
As I'm not a skilled film shooter, for portraits I would chose a portrait film, maybe Kodak Portra 160. Bit slower film, so more open lens. But when I would go for great colors, I would chose something like Kodak Ektar 100. For this one, it's hard to say. A kimono is always very colorful, and its these colors that I want to capture. But the facial color could be a bit too much. With something like the Portra, I would fear to loose the colors of the kimono.
Any suggestions on how to solve this problem?
PS: If mayyyyybe this gets scanned, I could either intensify the Portra's colors or lessen the Ektar's colors. Is that an idea?
I've been reading for a long time here on APUG, but never posted here.
But now I have a question.
In about two weeks I'll shoot a friend of mine. Not sure yet if 135 film or 120 film, but it shouldn't matter.
She wants to show her kimonos, and now I'm unsure which film to use.
As I'm not a skilled film shooter, for portraits I would chose a portrait film, maybe Kodak Portra 160. Bit slower film, so more open lens. But when I would go for great colors, I would chose something like Kodak Ektar 100. For this one, it's hard to say. A kimono is always very colorful, and its these colors that I want to capture. But the facial color could be a bit too much. With something like the Portra, I would fear to loose the colors of the kimono.
Any suggestions on how to solve this problem?
PS: If mayyyyybe this gets scanned, I could either intensify the Portra's colors or lessen the Ektar's colors. Is that an idea?