Sirius Glass
Subscriber
Who cares if it is 20 miles or 2000 miles away? I would send it via mail anyway.
I agree, once it is in the mail the distance does not matter.
Who cares if it is 20 miles or 2000 miles away? I would send it via mail anyway.
"I don't live in Albuquerque, but this place claims no one in NM processes E6 anymore.
http://www.camera-darkroom.com/photolab.html
I live in the second largest city in the state, and as far as I know no one processes any film in town. The next city south, El Paso, Texas doesn't seem to have any businesses either. Not that I've found at least."
How about this:
http://www.visionsphotolab.com/e6.html
Not muted... natural.Is it me or do the colors look muted in that scan of the lady with flowers?
Not muted... natural.
Is it me or do the colors look muted in that scan of the lady with flowers?
The film looks more like Astia then E100G. Even RDPIII has more color then that. I'll blame it on the scan, but it still looks muted to me. Natural maybe, but E100G had more punch then that.
Is it me or do the colors look muted in that scan of the lady with flowers?
Not muted... natural.
Not that one can determine much from a screen, but, if it looks like Astia, Kodak has used the finest transparency film ever manufactured as its performance target.The film looks more like Astia then E100G...
i think that "muted" colors are what the emulsion is geared for, primarily 8mm and 16mm movie cameras, not landscape still shots. I think it is a good fit for that. now using it as a astia replacement, it actually fills a much needed hole in the slide film arsenal. hopefully we will get it in 120 and maybe even 4x5.
Now we have high def slides that look pretty darn good. What's the next complaint? 'I bet it doesn't project' or 'I bet it fades real fast...'
I can't wait to get my grubby fingers on a roll of this stuff, it looks amazing.
Now we have high def slides that look pretty darn good. What's the next complaint?
I can't wait to get my grubby fingers on a roll of this stuff, it looks amazing.
Ektachrome is released, you get your first roll, make 36 images, send it off for processing, and it is returned. Now what? Are you planning on just looking at the slides on a light table? Projecting them? Scanning them? Scan and print? How will Ektachrome fit into your workflow?
+1. Me too, and all that stuff. But until it's released, I've got some Velvia 50 and Provia 100F in the freezer to tide me over.
It will be a sad day in the photography world when Velvia 50 disappears again. But this stuff looks like an amazing portrait film that also works well for landscapes.
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