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In doors at night low light colour film options.

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So much? Seems annoyingly high for this example of indoors shooting with ISO 100 film.
 
Blue filter or fight it in scanning /printing. I have a bunch of 80 A filters and two or three rolls of Portra Tungsten 35 mm. frozen
 
Exactly that's why I was thinking of using an 82b filter that only looses about 1/3 of a stop, so while it's not fully correcting I was thinking of it as a compromise.
 
4 layer color neg films.

There is something that all of you are failing to take into account.

If the negative film in question is of the newer 4 layer color neg films,

it will correct for the tungsten light on it's own. That's what it's

designed to do. The days of getting that warm fireplace glow,

are now out without Photoshop. Run a test for yourself...

I know that the Fuji 1600 was & I think that both Kodak &

Fuji 800 Pro films were, last time I checked.

I just did a Nude Fireplace Shoot, last year, with available light,

to get that warm glow & the images, ( even the fire ),

were neutral...
 
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