I thought of Sekonic's occasional online tutorials that guide people through the fundamentals of spot metering. I also thought of Ansel Adams' "The Negative", with its explanation and application of spot metering. "The Negative" deals heavily with the Zone System (i N a black and white context), but the basic metering principals still apply.
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Yes I think I need a good spot metering lesson. I think my main problems are firstly using the wrong film for the wrong picture, attempting to use Velvia when the scene has too greater dynamic range and ballsing up my metering by not using the spot meter. Can anyone recommend some reading?
David,I'll do some googling.... I was after something more Velvia specific I guess. Of all my experience with cameras this is the only avenue I wonder along that I find super difficult.
I'll do some googling.... I was after something more Velvia specific I guess. Of all my experience with cameras this is the only avenue I wonder along that I find super difficult.
Pegasus (Kodak) RA4 production, Roger. The only manipulation is replacement of loss at the scan step e.g. light lost from the image through scanning is replaced a little over 1x, as a bit more will also be lost in printing (typically 0.3 stop) and gamut interleaving, print profiling. The whole process is very speedy, but printing still takes about 2 weeks given lab timelines and the running of the printer in batch jobbing in Fridays only. That means my 5 big prints of New Zealand will be run off tomorrow and collected on Monday. Happy as! I would still urge the OP to not give up on Velvia, and I suspect there is a problem with technique and/or the camera set up.
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So sorry for my very limited knowledge on the subject, but can you breifly explain the process? You mention scan... is there any way to make an optical print from slides by using only optical methods? I'm kinda new to slides...
Yes I think I need a good spot metering lesson. I think my main problems are firstly using the wrong film for the wrong picture, attempting to use Velvia when the scene has too greater dynamic range and ballsing up my metering by not using the spot meter. Can anyone recommend some reading?
Welp- I shot a roll of Velvia on a cheap Yashica FX-D- and some kentucky windage on the exposure compensation- let's see how it comes out...
This thread is making me nervous
Guess I should give it a shot on MF too
But I can't admire the orange look I get if I project my Ektar negatives to several feet size...
Ok I suppose they could be scanned and projected digitally but with nowhere near the resolution.
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It's been decades since I've used Velvia but I remember it worked best under somewhat subdued lighting conditions and I had to carefully watch color filtering. Otherwise, highlights got blown out and/or shadows were lost and/or color shift was severe. That's largely true of all slide film but Velvia was especially sensitive to scene contrast and color.
Velvia is the most frustrating film I have ever worked with. It doesn't matter whether I use a light meter or a digital camera as a light meter I throw 80% of my shots straight into the bin. It's so depressing. I had two films back this afternoon and only two shots out of twelve are worth scanning. (they are all 6x12's shot on a large format camera)
I can't work out what is going wrong, but I see little point in continuing to use this frustrating film, that essentially looks like something I can post process out of a digital camera. Can anyone give me any pointers?
Colour negative is a total joy in comparison!
i have a full and a partially full box of velvia (50 ) and provia (4x5 )
i don't have anyone local to process sheets of chromes or color negative film
so i plan on exposing them and processing them in plain old b/w developer
so i don't have to deal with miniscule latitude or excessive processing fees ...
I have yet to see anyone use grad filters in a manner that didn't end up looking fake. And a good illusionist should never show his hand.
There's a particular brand out there named for a particular outdoor photographer once addicted to them - and every damn shot he ever took with them looks ridiculously fake to me. Gosh, when are people going to learn that a chrome that looks great and snappy on a lightbox might not be all that easy to print. And since people scan and doctor up everything nowadays on PS anyway, and don't understand the distinction between color and noise, why do they even worry about the film? Don't get me wrong. I've shot my share of Velvia, even in 8x10. But I used it when a contrast boost was warranted, like in misty fog, not just to jar the senses.
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