It is worth noting that if one of the color components starts to shoulder off (or behave in some other nonlinear manner) at a given amount of exposure, then the color balance would shift. I don't know how this applies to Portra 160VC.
When I look at the Portra characteristic curves, I do see the green curve having a noticeably different slope than the others.
Hi Tim,
I agree with you... There is a shift in color balance... Certainly it must be based on slight higher under or overexposure in one layer...
To be precise about my test:
My scenes (warming filter on always: just one third of a stop so I metered at 160 always anyway...) under direct sun show underexposure at box speed (160 incident), and a cool (blue-magenta) shift giving sick, dark greens, and slightly unbalanced skins... If the sun is right behind me, +1 is great, with vibrant sunny mood (+2 clearly washed out), and if the sun is lateral, +1 is cold yet, and +2 is perfect: warm and with open shadows and saturated colors.
But my scenes in the shadows are just the contrary: at box speed (160 incident and filter on) are warm and very nice, and +1 and +2 produce colder results! (+2 more than +1, but +1 clearly cold)... Identical on the two soft light scenes I did!
This made me remember sometimes there are crossed opinions about exposure and overexposure of color negative film: while the common belief is overexposing a stop, some people say they prefer not doing it because the best colors are found at box speed: all my previous tests for years were done giving the highest importance to direct sun... But now with different light scenes to be sure and also twice to double check results, I can't forget what I see... Direct sun likes overexposure, but soft light doesn't... I can't imagine the technical reasons, but they're here... And I didn't scan home: I'm checking pro lab prints: they scanned after I told them not to correct anything while scanning, and knowing I was looking precisely for color variations produced by different exposure values...
I'll shoot for some time like this... Of course AE can be very bad here, and even any in camera metering, as a one stop variation from incident is very noticeable... I have years experience in color balance and in selective color in photoshop, and I know that even if we can do things, once the scan is too cold, no matter what we do, it will never look warm and real sunny and happy even if we place the skins just where we want... That's why I'm being picky with this...
Maybe someone shooting Portra 160 VC can use three frames in the middle of a roll to try this recipe and tell us later if those frames came out great...
Direct sun, incident+1 with warm filter... Lateral sun, incident+2 with warm filter... Shadows or overcast, plain incident with warm filter...
Yet I'm curious about the chemical / optical reasons for that "inverse" behavior depending on the kind of light...
Could it be something about the scanner detecting a much colder image when the scene is a non-direct sun one? If it's that, what really matters is that the scanners work like this, and the direct scan prints are beautiful even before any digital treatment of color...
Let's wait for some other members opinions and results...
Cheers,
Juan