Welcome to Photrio! I'm very please to see someone join us who actually makes such comparison videos so we can interact with you here directly - welcome aboard!
There's one suggestion I'd like to make when comparing color films: please include scans of multiple frames digitized side by side in the same scan/camera capture. Preferably make available these images in unedited form (so as a negative), and when editing, please apply the same curve (etc.) adjustments to the entire image, so of both negatives. Yes, that will mess up either or both of the images, but it's the only really convincing way to show the real difference between films. Of course, this still doesn't control for possible differences in exposure, processing etc., which can be controlled for by other means.
Also, I understand that the practical relevance of such a direct comparison might be limited to some; after all, for the final image, you would typically edit/print the negatives to account for their unique characteristic towards the desired end result. So a scenario where you do the exact same conversion and finishing process regardless of the nature of the negative is not what you'd typically do for a real-world image. At the same time, we all too often see/read conclusions like "X is warmer/more magenta/more crossed over etc. than Y." All too often, such conclusions are difficult to isolate from potential (and all too often, demonstrable) differences in processing choices made underway. The issue is very simple to deal with by making a couple of real side-by-side comparisons, which I find virtually always tell an interesting story and allow for more solid/compelling conclusions.
Thanks again for posting your video and I hope to see much of your work on Photrio!
Thanks; I really appreciate it. And I hate to sound like a negative Nancy, but the scans do exhibit what I see as a substantial problem when it comes to comparing color negative film using scans: they're to a large extent normalized, with the white point in the scan set to (approximately) the base color of the negative film. This brings two problems:, I’ve made available the raw, uninverted scans of the same frames I included above.
digitized side by side in the same scan/camera capture
That's one way; I think your present setup might also allow for the photographing of two half frames from different rolls side by side, if you take frames at the end of their respective film strips. But in principle, the way you describe, i.e. photograph with the same settings, should also work quite well.I don’t currently have a setup that lets me capture two negatives side by side in a single scan, but what I can do is scan both with the exact same camera settings and then digitally combine them before any inversion or color work is applied. I’m going to experiment with that and see what it reveals.
Haha, it'll pass!I'm not in a good mood.
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