My situation is that I noticed that one very specific color never shows up properly on my Portra 400 scans. It gets cooler and desaturated. The color is somewhere between pink and purple, maybe someone would be able to nail the name, it's basically the darker color of this girl's dress:
View attachment 344185
It shows up fairly life-like on iPhone photos or photos taken with my Canon digital camera, as shown above.
But the same dress never looks like this on Portra 400 scans. Here is what I get:
View attachment 344187
Sometimes, when the color gets closer to purple, it gets completely desaturated. This picture is particularly telling:
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Usually these look like this:
View attachment 344191
I have numerous other examples, with different light and different subjects. But it's always the pink/purple combo and always Portra. Could be a coincidence, I should probably shoot that dress on 5 different emulsions to make sure.
This can also be the limitation of my scanning. At the moment I sold all of my scanners and using the Sony A7R. I have access to 3 automatic color inversion tools, but I prefer to invert manually. No matter how I go about the inversion, I can't get that color to be even close (without destroying every other color in a photo). In case you're wondering, I have
zero complaints about the colors I normally get, as long as it's not this one
I will find a few negatives with this color and send them out to a lab asking for a raw scan, but while I do that, I wanted to post a question here and
see if my problem lies in the analog domain and perhaps emulsions have gamut limitations? (hence I'm posting into the analog section). I only see in with Portra, but I do not shoot enough color (and did not keep a good record of my past scans) so I can't find any examples of this color exposed on other films.
Thoughts?
[EDIT] I forgot to mention two other thoughts I had. First, could this be that Kodak deliberately wanted to desaturate this particular hue to make people's skin look better than in real life? Less cooked? It's called Portra, after all. The second is the observation that if you invert the digital image (with a truer color) in Photoshop it will look bright green, and I can't recall ever seeing a Portra neg with such punchy uninverted green. The latter thought prompted me to post here.