ags2mikon
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A 1 min. sodium sulfite bath (10 grams to the liter) after fixing clears T-max real well then a wash and photoflo.
This video was linked before and the reviewer kinda authoritatively stated that Phoenix I will not be produced anymore (earlier in the video he claims to have talked to Harman people):
And what did prints from the old phoenix look like.
1: the reds are wrong.I don't think those pictures of the Phoenix II negs are wrong at all, it's just that there seems to be some level of denial on here about masking.
Hue shifting of the cyan dye accomplishes nothing as long as there's no substantial difference in how the tristimulus digital capture or print medium is affected. Which for all we know is the case, see the example w.r.t. Phoenix 1 reds. That's what I asked about; I see no answer - do you have one or not?Hue shifting the blue to cyan in the negative image upthread makes the reds properly red.
I love those prints! Nothing else would have given you those results
Nothing else would have given you those results
he seems to have figured out the red more than others
Hue shifting of the cyan dye accomplishes nothing as long as there's no substantial difference in how the tristimulus digital capture or print medium is affected. Which for all we know is the case, see the example w.r.t. Phoenix 1 reds. That's what I asked about; I see no answer - do you have one or not?
OK, I see. I'm still wondering what explains the contaminated reds on PII that we didn't appear to have (or at least not so much) on PI.
I did, which I found interesting. He was showing how the two films compared when scanned the same way. The Phoenix II orange is definitely a thing. There was also a fragment of digital video showing the fuel pump which was more orange than Phoenix I, but that may just have been color grading. Phoenix I may have a tendency to show orangey reds more deep red than reality.That's absolutely correct; printing that film made me realize it, too. But I don't think it's something that's appreciated by many, and I have to admit it's also not what I'm looking for in general in my photography.
His colors are all over the place although generally subjectively pleasing. Did you notice the comparison on 9:31?
I did, which I found interesting. He was showing how the two films compared when scanned the same way. The Phoenix II orange is definitely a thing. There was also a fragment of digital video showing the fuel pump which was more orange than Phoenix I, but that may just have been color grading. Phoenix I may have a tendency to show orangey reds more deep red than reality.
Phoenix II seems to be an improved film with its own charm. People who only consider technical brownie points will still hate it, but I think lots of people will buy it and make beautiful images with it.
I think when making prints from a negative you can't change the contrast of one colour channel, you can only change the relative levels using filters (I don't print colour so don't know) I think the green base level on Phoenix II is quite high which leads to the orangey reds. Don't have a clear enough understanding to say more.
I asked about non-scanned prints from negatives because the Harman engineers obviously made some deliberate choices. The yellow colour of the unexposed film and the blue/purple base of the developed negative must have been chosen, and I wonder if they were tuned for modern photographic paper. We can tune things ourselves by shooting with colour filters.
Last thing: I think Phoenix II will probably turn out to look best shot at ISO 125-150
About pink/magenta stain I think that it is a dye that can be seen in every in color film and some BW film with color derived chemestry (e.g T-max).
Most color labs use a short or no wash going directly on stab bath, a regular procedure that can be find in kodak datasheet.
In home processing, where you can "waste" time, color films can be thoroughly washed. After the first 30" water rinse after fixer, water came off with a strong magenta color; if you wash your films for 10-15 minutes with a series of 30-60-120 seconds rinses untill wash water are clear the magenta cast on film disappear. I saw this with slide films (and may be that velvia magenta cast was due to washing too short?), color negative films (thorougly washed color negs have a less dense orange mask), with chromogenic BW films and of course with maskless color negs like Phoenix.
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I'll get my first rolls Tuesday, and I'm going to try RA4 printing. But as the film lacks the orange mask, my hopes are not very high.
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