wogster
Member
Completely agree. I've used it in 135 and 120, but any shots I have taken in daylight looked awful. I wouldn't say I'm a big fan of Ektar, but I could see its merit if you took the time to get really familiar with it.
Here are two shots of my dog on very overcast days (ah, winter in Vancouver). The red in my dog's fur is not accurately captured, and things aren't this blue in real life, but that seems to be common for this film. Shot on Nikon F80 / 50mm f/1,8, scanned Epson V500 1200dpi (these are the compressed jpegs, the actual files are on a different HDD). No photoshop, etc.
View attachment 58133
View attachment 58134
How do you know it's the film? It could be your scanner, it could be your monitor, it could be the software rendering the image, it could be your video card driver, it's not always the film that is at fault. The best you can do is make an optical print, if you can't remove a cast in an optical print with a reasonable filtration, then blame the film. The best thing you can do, if you need it on the computer, is use the white balance feature in software and pick something white to balance on. If it can't correct the cast without making something else look weird, then blame the film.