Hello Drew,
Hi Henning. Let me just qualify the discussion a tiny bit by stating this is in fact the "Analog" section as the forum, or as I would prefer to call it, the "Non-Digital" half,
which certainly doesn't preclude film and development advice which might help the hordes of digital printers (meaning mostly inkjet among amateurs), but does perhaps give people like me some leverage to highlight or promote full darkroom workflow, and how it is not only still entirely possible, but capable of exceptionally high quality results.
as I have often explained here on photrio, proved by my test results, optical enlarging with APO enlarging lenses delivers by far the best results in detail rendition / resolution compared to scanning, including the best drum scans. I have done several tests in this regard over the years. But drum scanners have the unsurpassed capability to record/extract (deep) shadow and highlight detail.
I am an optical printer myself. And I always try to encourage (young) film photographers to start optical enlargements in the darkroom.
But my point was that the market reality today is - as all direct colour papers are unfortunately gone - that optical colour printing does not play a significant role anymore for current reversal film shooters. And that therefore the evalution of reversal films should be based on the workflows the photographers really use. That is simply what they are interested in.
But there are still a few points I'd disagree with you on. 1) Provia hasn't pulled well since the generations I & II of it, and even then highlight crossover was a distinct risk (which I sometimes deliberately induced for creative effect); it does push a bit.
Well, my test results - and the results of lots of other photographers I have talked to - are different: Provia 100F pulls very good by 2/3 to 1 stop. I have never had any problems with it. You get lower contrast / higher DR as intended and excellent colour rendition.
It also pushes very well by 1 stop: Only a slight/minimal increase in contrast and grain, which is so low that you only see it in direct 1:1 comparison with the exact same shot without push (I have done lots of these direct comparisons). It gets slightly warmer with 1 stop push. Even a two stop push is possible. Of course then the quality decrease is visible and significantly bigger, but in situations where the question is "having a picture with not optimal technical quality vs. having no picture at all" it is a no brainer.
2) So far, I'm finding E100 sharper than Provia, but that was based on careful 35mm testing; I'm fooling around with 120 at the moment, but probably won't get around to sheet film for quite awhile since I still have some E100G 4x5 in the freezer.
I have done lots of direct 1:1 comparisons under perfect, ideal and identical test conditions: Same camera, same lens, same aperture, focus bracketing. Provia 100F is definitely sharper. This is also to be expected if you look at the MTF curves in the data sheets of both films.
I have also talked to other experienced photographers who have done direct comparisons, and they have got the same results: Provia being sharper than Ektachrome. You will also find lots of discussions online in other groups where photographers has come to the same conclusion.
3) Astia 100F was the finest grained E6 film ever, although "sharpness" involves contrastiness too. But in large format work that's a minor detail. With MF it comes more into play.
Yes, Astia (and its amateur derivate Sensia III) has been the finest grain E6 film. But grain with all current E6 films is so extremely fine today that it isn't an issue with any film. I can project 35mm slides on huge screens of several meters width and will not have a grain problem. Prints of poster sizes from 35mm transparency films are no problem at all. And with MF grain is absolutely no point to think about anymore at all.
4) So far I've found E100 speed spot on, and the color balance also spot on at 5500K.
I've shot dozens of rolls from the first batch (first coating run, different converting batches) which have been only real ISO 80/20°: I have done direct comparisons:
My two F6 bodies with identical metering, same lenses. One body loaded with Provia, the other with E100. Provia was spot on with ISO 100/21°. E100 at ISO 100/21° was 1/3 stop underexposed. Those with ISO 80/20° metering were correct.
Then I have done direct 1:1 comparisons in the studio, metered with a new Gossen DigiPro F2 handheld lightmeter. Same results.The E100 shots metered with ISO 100/21° were all underexposed, the Provia 100F under the identical conditions were spot on at ISO 100/21°.
Then I went outdoors also in addition with my F5, F100, F4s. Also all with correct working meters. Shot Provia and E100 in direct comparison. Again the same result: E100 underexposed when metered at ISO 100/21°, correct exposure when shot at ISO 80/20°. Provia 100F was always spot on at ISO 100/21°.
I have also talked to other experienced photographers who have done direct comparisons, too, and they have got the same results. You will also find lots of discussions online in other groups where photographers has come to the same conclusion and complained about underexposed E100 when shot at ISO 100/21°.
I have shot recently two E100 which performed better. Probably a new coating run. I will continue to examine that problem. Maybe Kodak has a batch consistency problem here.
5) I have never experienced any "green shadow" bias with late Ektachromes that you claim (per a very high quality true 5000K viewing system), and I do my control targets very precisely as well, but will continue to monitor results.
A friend of mine - very experienced, a quality fanatic and owner of a drum scanservice - has first pointed me to that and showed me his results with this slight green cast in the shadows. I have then searched online and found further examples (Alex Burke and Ben Horne reported about it as well if I remember right). I have then started a "shadow series" with E100. My result was that it doesn't occur always, and isn't to 100% predictable. I have got it mainly with portraits in shadows: The skin tones then shifted a bit to green. And that doesn't look very flattering, of course. Therefore I will use a slight fill-in flash in shadows with E100 in the future, which solves the problem (E100 generally has very good skin tones, so has Provia).
6) I'd agree that Provia is warmer than the last 3 generations of Ektachrome (E100S, E100G, and E100). That's an option I happened to like, just like I love more than one brand of coffee-flavored ice cream. But if necessary, it's easier to warm Ektachrome with a basic warming filter than to cool a warm film.
E100S and E100G have both been warmer than Provia 100F and E100. The colour difference between E100S, E100G and E100 is very obvious. You are the first and only person I have heard saying that E100S and E100G have been cooler than Provia. Astia and E100S, E100G have always been the films chosen by photographers who wanted a bit warmer rendering than Provia 100F.
Provia is neutral to slightly warm in comparison.
And E100 is neutral to slightly cool in direct comparison.
In comparison to all Kodak CN films, which are generally all on the "warm(er)/yellowish" side (has been a wanted, intended policy by Kodak), E100 offers a real alternative with its cooler tones. Which I think is good in general. Alternatives are important and good for us photographers.
7) Cyan skies? You'd be surprised how much of that is due to actual changes in the sky itself in recent decades. True deep blue skies are getting rarer even at high altitude.
No, it has nothing to do with changes in the sky itself. Over all the years I have shot Kodak and Fuji films side-by-side, at the same time and identical conditions. And the Fujis have always had the better, more natural /real blue sky colour, whereas the Kodaks have had this tendency to lighter blue and cyan (fortunately, new E100 finally don't has it anymore). Talked about that with lots of other landscape photographers, and they all said the same.
Some years ago I have talked with Ron Mowrey about that topic, and he confirmed my results. He explained to me that this shift to cyan has to do with the colour couplers Kodak is using.
Best regards,
Henning