George Mann
Member
If you want to evaluate a film, the only way to do it is to get a roll and make some images for yourself.
At $18 a pop? Even at half its price it would be a hard sell given what I have seen from it so far.
If you want to evaluate a film, the only way to do it is to get a roll and make some images for yourself.
If you balk at spending $18 for your first roll, you are probably not Kodak's target market. I admit I'm not. I am not even happy with my Kodachrome scans, and I have a decent scanner. I have shifted to digital for color work.At $18 a pop? Even at half its price it would be a hard sell given what I have seen from it so far.
If you balk at spending $18 for your first roll, you are probably not Kodak's target market.
I admit I'm not. I am not even happy with my Kodachrome scans, and I have a decent scanner. I have shifted to digital for color work.
At $18 a pop? Even at half its price it would be a hard sell given what I have seen from it so far.
What’s the point of asking these questions if you’ve already decided you won’t use the film anyway?? Jeez Louise.
What’s the point of asking these questions if you’ve already decided you won’t use the film anyway?? Jeez Louise.
If you're complaining about $18($13 at adorama/bh) a roll, why even consider it, especially since your mind is already prejudiced against it.
You seem to agonize over film choices
Faulty assumptions lead to faulty conclusions. My whole point of the post was to find out where the problem lies, and whether or not there was a problem with the film itself.
What a waste of film. I only saw two images out of the whole lot that I wouldn't have pitched in the bin.
How do you have an opinion if you haven't tried it?I need to know before spending $18 a roll for it.
Not prejudiced. Just let down by what I have seen from it so far.
Give it up Paul. It is too much to ask. He is not serious. He doesn't want to spend the money to buy and process a roll of film to decide for himself.But the point is that you haven’t SEEN anything yet, just derivative representations on a screen, using software that delivers a severely reduced gamut. Until you’ve shot a roll for yourself (is that really expecting too much??) then you’re attempting to form an opinion based on poor derivatives.
I have seen examples of the new film mounted ready for projection in a photography outlet in London. To my eye in a quick look they were amongst the best I have ever seen with regards to contrast - not too high. Saturation not quite on the same level as Velvia 50 and the sharpness when looked at very closely very good indeed. I know that these were probably exposed by specialists for advertising purposes so they will technically be the best of the best, so there is no reason why a photographer using it should ever get something markedly diferent.
As for cost, I remember when I started out with photography in the very early 1960's the price of a 36 exp cassette of the original Kodachrome which was only 10 ISO was around the equivalent of £1.60 in UK. Converted to the same price in $'s would be around 2.24$ at todays rates. But change the price allowing for infaltion over the intervening 50 years the price doesn't seem so bad.
I have just compare an on-line inflation calculator with a base line of 1962 and the price of a cassette of the new Ektachrome in the US is about 26 dollars. In UK it is significantly more and using the same criteria the price comes out at just under £34
But the point is that you haven’t SEEN anything yet, just derivative representations on a screen, using software that delivers a severely reduced gamut. Until you’ve shot a roll for yourself (is that really expecting too much??) then you’re attempting to form an opinion based on poor derivatives.
I don't think I have seen any other threads in which a poster was making a decision on whether to try a film based on scans. Any reasonable person (and any reasonable person giving advice) would think the best way to evaluate a film would be to try it yourself. Remember, the OP is also asking whether he should use Portra or Ektar, as if someone else can make that decision for him.By the arguments presented here, there's really little point in anyone ever posting scans of anything online, or identifying what product they scanned. That its not the same as seeing the print or slide in person is a no-brainer. But to claim you can't derive any meaningful visual information by which to evaluate and compare the product from a scan seems illogical and defensive. Is new Ektachrome the only film to suffer from this limitation? Because I've never seen the argument so strenuosuly presented in defense of any other film or print product.
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