Darryl Roberts
Member
Hi,
Have you pushed Kodak Portra 800 to 1600? If so, what were the results/pitfalls?
Thank you
Have you pushed Kodak Portra 800 to 1600? If so, what were the results/pitfalls?
Thank you
It works fine - if you understand what that underexposure will do to your shadows & the extended processing to your straight line. The curves are more resistant to crossover than some other films, hence why it can take a push with fewer issues.
What outcome are you looking for?
Shoo
Shooting a lady inside of a supermarket, no flash, no tripod.
Is the ambient lighting fluorescent, metal halide, tungsten, LED, a mix of the above, or something else? Portra 800 is pretty good at handling mixed lighting sources, but you might find that balancing for skin tones throws everything else somewhere you aren't expecting.
Moved from the Instant Film sub-forum to the Color: Film, Paper and Chemistry sub-forum.
Try to position your subject so the lighting is even, and it won't be too damaging to your image if some of the shadows aren't that detailed.
Then meter and expose the film at EI of 1600, and develop it normally.
Watch out for mixed light sources that lead to facial highlights in one light, and facial shadows in another.
Here is an example (of slide film) with a plethora of mixed light sources. It works because the critical part of the image - the face - is relatively evenly lit. Note that the shadows under the chin don't show signs of any colour cast, indicating they are illuminated with the same sort of light as the face. View attachment 307045
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