DREW WILEY
Member
- Joined
- Jul 14, 2011
- Messages
- 13,932
- Format
- 8x10 Format
Color neg films have inherent problems dumping yellow-oranges into skintones and being unable to
differentiate hues in this zone, and still quite a problem with cyan infecting yellow-greens. Ektar and
to some extend Portra 400 and now disc 160VC are better in the latter category, but far from ideal.
Blue-violets are also a difficult area in which chromes surpass. But no film is in the league of direct
in-camera color separation. I doubt that many commercial photographers can afford the newer forensic style camera used by museums, though some affordable digital system might be around the
corner someday. Chromes can be easily masked to outperform basic negative for color correction
purposes, obviously not for exposure range. But truly critical color work is generally done under
controlled studio or lab conditions anyway. Heck, I effect mask color negs to correct them. But the
sheer cost of using multiple sheets of 8X10 film is a serious limiting factor these days.
differentiate hues in this zone, and still quite a problem with cyan infecting yellow-greens. Ektar and
to some extend Portra 400 and now disc 160VC are better in the latter category, but far from ideal.
Blue-violets are also a difficult area in which chromes surpass. But no film is in the league of direct
in-camera color separation. I doubt that many commercial photographers can afford the newer forensic style camera used by museums, though some affordable digital system might be around the
corner someday. Chromes can be easily masked to outperform basic negative for color correction
purposes, obviously not for exposure range. But truly critical color work is generally done under
controlled studio or lab conditions anyway. Heck, I effect mask color negs to correct them. But the
sheer cost of using multiple sheets of 8X10 film is a serious limiting factor these days.