Just wanting a little bit of insight without having to burn too many rolls trying to find out how film stocks react, but I have heard a myriad of thoughts on optimizing exposure of color neg images based of how you rate them.
I have been rating a majority of my film at box speed. I know that labs like H&H used to print the densities on the back of your proofs and optimally they should have fallen in the ~30ish range (Not sure how they measured them). And because of that one of the photographers I work with would rate his vericolor II at 64iso to get the optimal densities for H&H proofs.
Manipulating black and white and chrome this way isnt new for me, but in color neg i've never tried.
As a general practice, are most people overexposing their color neg or rating it lower than box speed to gain an advantage?
I have been rating a majority of my film at box speed. I know that labs like H&H used to print the densities on the back of your proofs and optimally they should have fallen in the ~30ish range (Not sure how they measured them). And because of that one of the photographers I work with would rate his vericolor II at 64iso to get the optimal densities for H&H proofs.
Manipulating black and white and chrome this way isnt new for me, but in color neg i've never tried.
As a general practice, are most people overexposing their color neg or rating it lower than box speed to gain an advantage?