Good Transparency film for showing accurate colour

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thefizz

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I am photographing wooden furniture and need a transparency film that will show accurate colours of the different woods.

I have Fuji Provia, Astia and Velvia in stock but can get other brands if required.

Any recommendations?

Peter
 

Dave Parker

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I have always used provia for stock work, neutral colors with very fine grain..I also know alot of people like Astia, Velvia will be to saturated for a shoot of this nature.

Dave
 

BradS

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Yeah, I'd go with the Provia. Kodak E100G might also be a good choice but, if you have Provia and are familiar with it, go with that.
 
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thefizz

thefizz

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Thanks guys,

I have so far used Provia and it seems to be fairly accurate. I know Velvia is too much for this sort of work so I may try some Astia and compare with the Provia.

Peter
 

roteague

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Provia, it is the sharpest of the bunch, with good, strong, but accurate colors. Velvia is too much, unless you are going for the arty look.
 

Dave Parker

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mrcallow said:
under daylight epn under tungsten epy

Both good films, but around here getting real hard to find...hence the provia..

Dave
 

Lee Shively

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I haven't shot color in 3 years so my information is probably outdated.

Although Provia and Velvia have advantages in terms of sharpness and grain, Astia used to be considered the most accurate in rendering colors.
 
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thefizz

thefizz

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Thank you all for your advise.

For the next job I will shoot both Provia and Astia and compare. Now I'm off to bed, night all.

Peter
 

Craig

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If you're using 35mm, Kodachrome, otherwise EPN is a very neutral film. I find most of the Fujichromes to be too saturated - pleasing, but not accurate.
 

Dave Parker

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Kodachrome? My favorite film, but not very practical in this day and age..

Dave
 

df cardwell

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Kodak EPN. The best of the best.
.
 

David A. Goldfarb

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EPN for accurate color.
 

c6h6o3

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I like EPY for everything. The daylight chromes have too much contrast.
 

jason314159

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thefizz said:
I am photographing wooden furniture and need a transparency film that will show accurate colours of the different woods.

I have Fuji Provia, Astia and Velvia in stock but can get other brands if required.

Peter

Others have recommended EPN and I agree; for this type of assignment it excels. That's why it is still around. You should at least evaluate it versus Astia. With my setup I generally expose EPN at EI 100.
 

eddym

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I'll give another vote to Kodak EPN. I shoot 4x5 transparencies of art work for reproduction, and EPN is my choice.
 

Ed_Davor

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That's right folks, keep EPN and similar Ektachromes the ones that will go last
 

roteague

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Willie Jan said:
the new velvia 100 is somewhat more unsaturated the the 50.

I'm not too sure about that. I just spent a month in New Zealand shooting Velvia 100, the only difference I saw was in the greens, everything else was the same.
 
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