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What about a Skylight 1A filter, for the current Ektachrome? I know I should test it, myself, but is it a decent starting point?A basic 1B skylight filter is traditionally a good thing to have for distance shots, particularly at high altitude; but I've found an even weaker barely yellow Hoya 0 "colorless" multicoated UV filter preferable for later Ektachromes, including the present product.
Yeah, you can't go wrong with a 1A; but it does only a tiny bit more than a 0 (zero) "colorless". I've found the multi-coated Hoya 1B to be more versatile. I rarely used filters in relation to Ektachrome itself. A notable exception would be haze or UV reduction, along with its blueness, especially at high altitude.
Then there's the matter of deep blue overcast and wanting to warm up the image somewhat, which is a different kind of scenario potentially mandating an 81A or KR1.5 also in your kit.
Alan - 81A, for example, is just 200 deg lower K temp regardless of whatever scene temp you start with, and so forth. The daylight standard Kodak films are engineered for is 5500 K. So if you have a really excessive blue shadow or overcast situation of, say, 5900K, and use an 81A, it's going to help; but a 81C would be the more correct fit. But if you take those same filters and start of with a typical 5500 or 5200 situation, then the result is going to look distinctly artificially warmed, ala the Godfather Movie look.
The Kodak Scientific and general filter hand book gives graphs based on decamired filter values which show the color temp conversion involved in each case for their own Wratten series of filters.
Not many people go around with a color temperate meter outside of a studio; but with some experience shooting and viewing your slides atop a well balanced 5000K lightbox, one learns pretty fast which filters do the job that or not, if they choose to use filters with chrome film at all.
With my Minolta color temp meter, I just enter the color temp and balance I am trying to achieve, take the reading, and then punch another button, and the meter automatically assigns the CC and LB values relative to the task. CC refers to green versus magenta cc filter increments, LB to light balancing plus or minus using
81-series amber yellow warming filters versus 82 series blueish filters. All that is valuable when precisely calibrating film batches or artificially controllable lighting setups.
Out in the field, except for making standardized daylight master printing chromes or representative color negatives from a MacBeth chart under ideal conditions, all that fuss in a bit of overkill, and just a few filters will suffice for nearly all encountered conditions if a little post-tweaking is factored either in the colorhead settings or the computer program. But if you're too far off, then you risk curve crossover etc issues which are very difficult to post-correct either way. And it's a helluva lot easier just to screw on a reasonable filter to begin with.
Can you eliminate blues on Ektachrome digitally during the edit process using Lightroom or Photoshop?
The proper way
Can you eliminate blues on Ektachrome digitally during the edit process using Lightroom or Photoshop?
They'll spend a week slithering and dithering through a scanned image trying to clean up some kind of unwanted shift which would have involved just 30 seconds with the right kind of correction filter at the time of the shot.
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