I don't know that, statistically speaking, women have better colour vision, but as I understand it, diagnosable colour blindness is more prevalent among males.
Ahhhh! So that explains why my wife sees red a lot more frequently when I do stuff she doesn't like.There is some research that indicates the female brain can process the information from the cones better than the male brain and thus separate out shades better that way -- rather than having more and/or higher quality cones. A result of brain development (in womb) being influenced by different hormones. But I have not looked into it enough to swear by it.
I for one would find it easier if the test strip were more recognisable.Hi folks,
new updates: I'm working on the right filtration and I started by following the suggest of @MattKing. I reached 100M and 60Y. I think it's almost the result that I want. I had thsi result but I don't know if is depending by chemicals or by filtration?
I use 100M 40/60Y but so far the other tests with the same values seemed so yellowish/greenish
What do you think about it?
I for one would find it easier if the test strip were more recognisable.
I did this scan... As you can see it's magenta...
View attachment 245436
I agree.I for one would find it easier if the test strip were more recognisable.
I'm using a MEOPTA OPEMUS 6 with color head. The paper is fuji crystal archive and the chemicals are Bellini RA-4 35°The filtration you are using seems to be extreme. I don't know what your enlarger is but there are basically 2 filtration values. Durst and Kodak. I believe the Durst values are higher when compared to same with Kodak They are significantly different. The colour developer may also make a difference as will the temperature it is used at.
I use an LPL7700 which is calibrated in Kodak values and for a correctly exposed and normally developed negative the filtration is nearly always around 65M and 60Y when developed in the Tetenal 5 litre kit. If you can say what enlarger you are using and the RA4 developer you are using plus the working temperature, that could be helpful.
That magenta is a problem with either light fog or uneven processing - are you trying to use a safelight?
Correct one color at a time. If it's too blue, you'll have to subtract yellow. If it's too green, you'll have to subtract magenta. I would get a book on RA color printing so you could learn how to balance a print. It took me years because it's totally counter intuitive. As you fine tune your final colors, a set of viewing filters is helpful.
Flavia,No, I'm completely in the dark.
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