Color crossover is a characteristic that requires different filtration for neutral color balance in different parts (shadows, midtones, highlights) of the negative. An example: If your highlights are neutral, your shadows may be too green, and if you balance for neutral shadows, the highlights would then shift too magenta. If you were to draw a characteristic curve for each color layer of the film, the curves would have different slopes, and would cross each other when normalized, ergo "crossover".Ed_Davor said:can someone please explain what crossover is?
Lee L said:Color crossover is a characteristic that requires different filtration for neutral color balance in different parts (shadows, midtones, highlights) of the negative. An example: If your highlights are neutral, your shadows may be too green, and if you balance for neutral shadows, the highlights would then shift too magenta. If you were to draw a characteristic curve for each color layer of the film, the curves would have different slopes, and would cross each other when normalized, ergo "crossover".
I've heard this complaint about the Fuji line of print films in the past, especially when comparing their consumer film line to Kodak. A review of the Fuji Pro 160S by Ctein in Photo Techniques last year didn't indicate that this was a big problem with the film, and he's pretty sensitive to it.
Lee
Is Superior Reala the same film renamed, it still has the same designation CS ?.Ed_Davor said:Yea, I liked Reala, but they don't make it anymore (exept for superia reala which is nice but not quite the same)
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