Adrian Bacon
Subscriber
Yes, I agree - although I'd like to invite @Adrian Bacon to address this in a separate thread so that the present one can remain focused on equipment/tooling choices.
Ok. I don’t know how much of this is useful as a fair amount of it is relatively difficult/tedious to do with modern image editing tools, but I’ll dispense what I know. A fair amount of it might seem to be stupid simple common sense type stuff, but for some reason there abounds all sorts of terrible advise about it on the internet.
so… C-41 is standardized. What does that actually mean? Well, it means it’s designed to be printed with RA-4 paper. OK, what does that mean? Well, do the manufacturers make RA-4 paper for every color negative emulsion made? Nope. There’s a small handful of RA-4 papers that most all color negative films are designed to be printed on, and the variation between RA-4 papers isn’t that big. So, not to be too blunt about it, RA-4 paper, and by extension C-41 effectively has a set contrast response for each color channel for ALL films. Wait.. what? Yes. Now some films may have more or less contrast, but it’s relative to that standard set contrast and can effectively be ignored unless You want to dial it out.
other points about the contrast: we don’t care what the contrast is as seen by a densitometer. We don’t care what the contrast is as seen by RA-4 paper. We care what the contrast is as seen by our scanning lens and digital camera. How do we get the contrast? I used a combination of kodak control strips (HD-LD) and made careful test exposures that does a similar thing with all currently available film stocks and measured the contrast for each using my scanning setup, then went and calculated the average.
what about the orange mask? What about it? If you set the per channel contrast correctly, then white balance, the orange mask goes away all by itself, just like with RA-4 paper. Think about that and let that sink in.
so from a simple math perspective, it’s: get sample, apply contrast to each channel, invert, set white balance, apply digital exposure adjustment so the important parts of the image are in the visible part of the display. There’s obviously more to final output than that, but that’s the gist In terms of roughly mimicking how RA-4 paper works with a digital solution.
questions?