Donald Qualls
Subscriber
I got an email this morning from Cinestill -- they're now offering their "simplified" three-bath E-6 kit with a choice of three first developers. One standard (develops daylight film with daylight color balance), one "warm tone" (develops daylight film with a tungsten-like color balance -- saves a two-stop filter factor is you have daylight film and tungsten light), and one "dynamic" that's kind of in between for color balance, but expands the dynamic range (they claim 9+ stops instead of the usual max of 6).
I presume this color balance shift has to do with tailoring developer chemistry and conditions to develop the bottom layer in the film more or less relative to the top two layers (or something similar -- in other words, introducing a controlled color cast) -- but how that can happen and not wind up with crossovers and such is something of a mystery, never mind expanding the dynamic range without changing the exposure index.
As a new product, this may be too soon, but has anyone tried this product, or done this with customized first developers in general?
I presume this color balance shift has to do with tailoring developer chemistry and conditions to develop the bottom layer in the film more or less relative to the top two layers (or something similar -- in other words, introducing a controlled color cast) -- but how that can happen and not wind up with crossovers and such is something of a mystery, never mind expanding the dynamic range without changing the exposure index.
As a new product, this may be too soon, but has anyone tried this product, or done this with customized first developers in general?