mshchem
Subscriber
Looks good. Old school.
Has any one else noticed that it seems to come with BH perforation? The other Adox films do not, which suggests that they perforated it either with new equipment or someone else did it for them.
EDIT: Just to explain: BH perf. is what's used on movie camera films like Kodak Vision etc.
That is interesting and makes sense. Adox could easily offer it as a cine stock if they wanted to in the future.
At this point in time, all bets are off. Since the typical delivery is NOT print stock, it can just as easily be originated from any film.C-41 film as cine stock?
Has any one else noticed that it seems to come with BH perforation? The other Adox films do not, which suggests that they perforated it either with new equipment or someone else did it for them.
EDIT: Just to explain: BH perf. is what's used on movie camera films like Kodak Vision etc.
What changed? Not just "at this point in time", what changed in the last 10 years that C-41 is now suddenly a cine stock just like any other ECN-2 stock? I mean, even ORWO is sticking to ECN-2 for their newly announced cine stock. I'm not saying C-41 can't possibly ever serve that market, but Adox punching BH perforations now because they believe in 5-10 years ECN-2 will be gone...
Thanks for the clarification. I didn't want to suggest that you were hiding anything, it was just something that stroke my eye. Is there any special reason for using BH perf on a still film?We perforate this film stock ourselves. This is why we currently cannot catch up with demand.
Is there any special reason for using BH perf on a still film
We simply have more film-film perforators than still-film perforators and since it is actually a higher level of accuracy we use them on the higher volume runs and the other machine only for low volumes. For the consumer it does not matter. Both films run fine through any camera.Thanks for the clarification. I didn't want to suggest that you were hiding anything, it was just something that stroke my eye. Is there any special reason for using BH perf on a still film?
Both films run fine through any camera.
Thanks!
The scans have the Frontier look (am I wrong?), so it's a bit hard to judge.
We use all high standard Lab scanners (Fuji, Agfa, Noritsu and a Kodak one).
But they are still minilab scanners, & they impose their own ideas of colour/ colour correction/ gamut on to the negs (before the operator even sees the files) in ways that either a direct RA-4 optical print, or a scan done on high end kit (X-Y CCD/ Imacon/ drum scanner/ camera-scan etc) & carefully manually inverted may not.
But they are still minilab scanners, & they impose their own ideas of colour/ colour correction/ gamut on to the negs (before the operator even sees the files) in ways that either a direct RA-4 optical print, or a scan done on high end kit (X-Y CCD/ Imacon/ drum scanner/ camera-scan etc) & carefully manually inverted may not.
Maybe @Joerg Bergs could provide a high-end scan or camera scan of a few of the shots just for comparison.
Thank you for the reply and I look forward to seeing the print V scan comparison.I will post a real RA4 print direct from the negative in the next weeks. It´s very closed to our scans.
We have tested the Color Mission in our lab. Here you can see some samples:
https://www.meinfilmlab.de/adox-color-mission-200/
Each owner can, if they will, modify or turn off any auto correction (not only in the operator section).
Anything above 20 MPixel blow up the grain with no other useful information.
Only up to a point. I know that discussing scanning is throwing this thread way off-topic,
it'll be interesting to see what the direct optical RA-4 print looks like.
Photrio.com contains affiliate links to products. We may receive a commission for purchases made through these links. To read our full affiliate disclosure statement please click Here. |
PHOTRIO PARTNERS EQUALLY FUNDING OUR COMMUNITY: ![]() |