Provia goes blue:
though one should keep in mind that it's blue because the light is blue; the colour here is accurate.
Correcting blue shadows has always been an issue when printing or with chromes for that matter.
Shadows are blue. Someone saying that the film "goes blue" in light that is blue is doing the film a disservice. That is all I mean.
I guess that's fair, but a lot of people seem to feel that Provia 100F especially captures shadows as perceptually "bluer" than they looked at the time. I don't know if that's because it's more color-accurate than our own perception is, or because its response actually skews blue at low light levels, but I think it's reasonable to point it out as a characteristic of the film that a lot of people notice when using it.
-NT
So, it doesn't "go blue" then.....
I normally don't shoot slide film because the only way to print it is with an internegative or that-process-that-shall-not-be-named
After re-reading this thread it really got me thinking about what happens to our transparencies when it's time to print. Almost all of us are scanning these E-6 films now and printing either lightjet, chromira, lambda, inkjet.. etc. So any color cast or saturation differences between these films can easily be corrected for in P****S*** before printing. I could make Provia look like Velvia, or easily correct the blue cast of provia 400. So to me the choice is easy, I'm shooting Provia for its slightly lower contrast and I'll worry about everything else later.
Much discussion - care less, shoot more...
Shall I throw in Fuji Fortia as an option ? heh heh
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