This is a long standing question I've had with film and I've only shot one or two stocks of film, done darkroom prints and stuck with that so I'm lacking knowledge but with so much variability in processing and scanning, how much of a films characteristics are preserved? For example, Kodak Portra advertises: "Kodak's Professional Portra 400 is a high-speed daylight-balanced color negative film offering a smooth and natural color palette that is balanced with vivid saturation and low contrast for accurate skin tones and consistent results."
Let's take skin tones, won't these "accurate" skin tones look slightly different depending on the scanner you use, which lab you take your film to, as well as the post processing that your scanner does on the negative to make it a positive or even if it's a traditional darkroom print?
How consistent can you get with shooting film and expecting the film to render colors in a certain way when there is so much variability in the post processing of a film?
Let's take skin tones, won't these "accurate" skin tones look slightly different depending on the scanner you use, which lab you take your film to, as well as the post processing that your scanner does on the negative to make it a positive or even if it's a traditional darkroom print?
How consistent can you get with shooting film and expecting the film to render colors in a certain way when there is so much variability in the post processing of a film?

