DREW WILEY
Member
- Joined
- Jul 14, 2011
- Messages
- 14,025
- Format
- 8x10 Format
I can routinely get more accurate outdoor colors with Ektar than with almost any other color film I've ever used. And I'm talking about difficult subtle hue distinctions. But this requires both an understanding of how this film works, esp per color temperature, and precise printing skills. It is not oversaturated whatsoever. The weak point is probably in subtle distinctions between orange-yellows and yellow-oranges, though it's much better in this hue category than any other color neg film. And notoriously, blue shadows can become annoying if you don't know how to correct for them in the initial shot. Not a sterotypical understated skintone film, however. And when it comes to chromes, the late great Fuji Astia was probably the most correct overall, but poor in certain conditions. There has never been a silver bullet out there that worked best for everything. I remember how old school pre-E6 Agfachrome would precisely pick up fluorescent lichen colors and complex mineral golds and browns that no other film since has been capable of, yet was horrible at green reproduction. There are certain subtle shades of early Spring "Irish" green which only Velvia and E100S seemed capable of bagging, provided you had one of the
very rare lenses capable of recording these distinctions. Printing them was next to impossible. But over time, people who get accustomed to the idiosyncrasies of a particular film and learn to print well with it anyway kinda lull themselves into the subconscious myth that this is
how the world really looked. No film is perfect by a long shot. But it sure helps to recognize this fact, master one or another, and live within its parameters. Or of course you can just defect to Fauxtoshop and start learning how to throw colored Jello onto things, just like in
Kindergarten.
very rare lenses capable of recording these distinctions. Printing them was next to impossible. But over time, people who get accustomed to the idiosyncrasies of a particular film and learn to print well with it anyway kinda lull themselves into the subconscious myth that this is
how the world really looked. No film is perfect by a long shot. But it sure helps to recognize this fact, master one or another, and live within its parameters. Or of course you can just defect to Fauxtoshop and start learning how to throw colored Jello onto things, just like in
Kindergarten.