That's interesting. Curiously that high key, absorb overexposed highlight C41 is the "film look" nowadays. And as the minilab scanners don't take E6 so nicely (or, not as manipulative in the same way) it's just not very popular.Not to set off a firestorm, but I really can't imagine why anyone would shoot C-41 these days. For years I stuck with negative film because I thought the whole point was to get a "picture" (the print). Now I look at all those prints from Kodak Gold with their washed out colors and soft details and think "Wow, that would have been a really great slide.".
Given that "the print" is pretty much universally done d!&!+@lly now days, you can have the best of both worlds. In my experience slides make much better prints than negatives.
Not to set off a firestorm, but I really can't imagine why anyone would shoot C-41 these days. For years I stuck with negative film because I thought the whole point was to get a "picture" (the print). Now I look at all those prints from Kodak Gold with their washed out colors and soft details and think "Wow, that would have been a really great slide.".
Given that "the print" is pretty much universally done d!&!+@lly now days, you can have the best of both worlds. In my experience slides make much better prints than negatives.
Not to set off a firestorm, but I really can't imagine why anyone would shoot C-41 these days. For years I stuck with negative film because I thought the whole point was to get a "picture" (the print). Now I look at all those prints from Kodak Gold with their washed out colors and soft details and think "Wow, that would have been a really great slide.".
Given that "the print" is pretty much universally done d!&!+@lly now days, you can have the best of both worlds. In my experience slides make much better prints than negatives.
Totally agree . Minilab prints can be horrible. Optical prints from Fuji or Kodak professional films are amazing. My inexpensive Canon inkjet looks better than some of the mass produced RA-4 snapshots. Scanning negatives, for me is much more of a headache than slides. But I am incompetent at scanning.You've evidently never used professional negative films or had top quality optical prints (or for that matter high end CCD or PMT/ drum scans) made. The quality difference is not small. Compared to transparency film, professional C-41 films are vastly more colour accurate, & offer many qualitative advantages. They do however require basic competence in printing and/ or scanning.
Not to set off a firestorm, but I really can't imagine why anyone would shoot C-41 these days. For years I stuck with negative film because I thought the whole point was to get a "picture" (the print). Now I look at all those prints from Kodak Gold with their washed out colors and soft details and think "Wow, that would have been a really great slide.".
Given that "the print" is pretty much universally done d!&!+@lly now days, you can have the best of both worlds. In my experience slides make much better prints than negatives.
Totally agree . Minilab prints can be horrible. Optical prints from Fuji or Kodak professional films are amazing. My inexpensive Canon inkjet looks better than some of the mass produced RA-4 snapshots. Scanning negatives, for me is much more of a headache than slides. But I am incompetent at scanning.
There's a good reason motion pictures have always been shot on negative film. Don't get me wrong I love slides, but mostly for projection or just as a little jewel to look at with a loupe.
Best Regards Mike .
While I agree with you that Kodak Gold is a terrible looking film, I would not classify all C41 films the same way. Reala 100, NPS160, 400H, and C200 are all (or were in a few cases) excellent looking films that print beautifully.
Not to set off a firestorm, but I really can't imagine why anyone would shoot C-41 these days. For years I stuck with negative film because I thought the whole point was to get a "picture" (the print). Now I look at all those prints from Kodak Gold with their washed out colors and soft details and think "Wow, that would have been a really great slide.".
Given that "the print" is pretty much universally done d!&!+@lly now days, you can have the best of both worlds. In my experience slides make much better prints than negatives.
The challenge with printing from transparencies is that they are generally wickedly contrasty and as such, very hard to print from. I learned this from personal experience trying to print some 2 1/4 transparencies - I burned through an entire $150 box of polyester-based Cibachrome paper with nary a print to show for it. I would have had to have contrast masks made, or else have internegatives made (defeating the purpose). Plus, I can hold detail in highlights with a negative much longer than I can with a transparency.I completely agree regarding the relative quality of Gold. At one point I had some Reala mixed in with Gold from the same trip, and the difference between the two was just amazing. But that was right when I was making the change to VS (beautiful, sublime VS...) so there was no reason to further explore Fuji's print offerings.
But now with E-6 you get the best of both worlds, a jewel like original plus a print with great contrast and color. Of course, with C-41 you don't have to be as careful with metering. So it is convenient for using with cameras that have no meter, cameras where the meter is broken, of with box type cameras with little or no control of the shutter speed and aperture.
The challenge with printing from transparencies is that they are generally wickedly contrasty and as such, very hard to print from. I learned this from personal experience trying to print some 2 1/4 transparencies - I burned through an entire $150 box of polyester-based Cibachrome paper with nary a print to show for it. I would have had to have contrast masks made, or else have internegatives made (defeating the purpose). Plus, I can hold detail in highlights with a negative much longer than I can with a transparency.
The challenge with printing from transparencies is that they are generally wickedly contrasty and as such, very hard to print from. I learned this from personal experience trying to print some 2 1/4 transparencies - I burned through an entire $150 box of polyester-based Cibachrome paper with nary a print to show for it. I would have had to have contrast masks made, or else have internegatives made (defeating the purpose). Plus, I can hold detail in highlights with a negative much longer than I can with a transparency.
One of the reasons that I stopped shooting slides is that it was hard to get good prints made from slides.
Not to set off a firestorm, but I really can't imagine why anyone would shoot C-41 these days. For years I stuck with negative film because I thought the whole point was to get a "picture" (the print). Now I look at all those prints from Kodak Gold with their washed out colors and soft details and think "Wow, that would have been a really great slide.".
Given that "the print" is pretty much universally done d!&!+@lly now days, you can have the best of both worlds. In my experience slides make much better prints than negatives.
One of the reasons that I stopped shooting slides is that it was hard to get good prints made from slides.
Sirius, it is not difficult to get good prints. It never was. Looking in the right place and for the right method is all that is required.
Sadly, old urban myths abound about the sole and only use of slides being for projection. Hello!? New Flash to these foks: bullshit. Slides have been printed since 1963 (one of my aunties had Cibas printed of Trooping the Colour in London, dated 1967, and they are still beautiful to look at), and likely before that. No great difficulty in printing to Ilfochrome Classic from slides, so long as you are properly qualified and knew the process. Hybrid methods do away with the stench and mess of Ilfochrome (and the now-legendary failures of their quality control) with modern materials definitely getting a leg up on the old bastion.
My experience has been that the difficulty is with exposure of the slides, and by direct association, the photographer, not the printing process. A poorly exposed slide will not print well to either Ilfochrome Classic or RA-4 (wet/hybrid of darkroom). A well exposed slide is a cinch to print, but those at the margin of contrast (common with 35mm) or simply shot in illumination for which slide film has never been known to cope well are major and recurring themes, right to this day where we, as printers, reject work based on the poor quality of exposure and unrealistic expectations of (seemingly) experienced photographers. People just are not learning.
Weird— there is no path at this time to a straight optical print from a slide.
Right, I saw a thread about that. But I was referring to a commercially available product to create reversal prints. I was kinda shocked when I returned to making color prints after a long time away and found that there were no longer any off-the-shelf reversal materials for making prints. Color neg wasn't much to write home about -especially in 35mm- in the '80's. I loved the extremely fine grain of Kodachrome. One look at Galen Rowell's work before he switched to Velvia confirms that. I made beautiful 16x20 reversal pints from 35mm. Cut to 4-5 years ago when I got back into it and there is beautiful, fine grain Kodak Portra and Ektar in 35mm, 120 and 4x5. I enjoy the ease, quality and price(!) of C41 and RA4 materials.Don't know if there is anything commercially produced but a technique known as RA-4 Reversal can produce prints from slides optically with available materials with fair quality if done right.
The problem though is that most of the film was Fuji 800 press (the c41)
Gold 200 washed out and colorless, lacking detail? Nonsense. With a canon rebel 2k and cheap 28-80 kit lens. Late morning harsh, terrible light.
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and the same scene with ektar 100 a little later in the morning, for reference
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