Roger, in most cases you supply the formula or even the materials to Inoviscoat. They do not do R&D for you except to a small extent to establish the coating parameters. And that is what caused the demise of K25. It could only be coated on 1 machine and the R&D needed to develop a new coating formula was not there due to low sales.
PE
Interesting Nzoomed! Very interesting indeed. If we knew what the problem was, do you think we would have failed?
Actually, we pretty much did have hints, but there was no simple solution then. AFAIK, there is none now either.
PE
Interesting Nzoomed! Very interesting indeed. If we knew what the problem was, do you think we would have failed?
Actually, we pretty much did have hints, but there was no simple solution then. AFAIK, there is none now either.
PE
On another note, why are C41 films so popular? I thought everyone claims they are supposed to have alot more resolution than slide film, but i fail to see that myself, ive only shot a few rolls of portra and kodak gold recently and its way more grainy than my E6 (E100g).
I think that is just another proof of how impossibly difficult it would be to reproduce Kodachrome....apart from everything else, it seems it's not just a matter of finding someone with a random coater, or building one from scratch !
Just for interest, was it only just one coater in the world that could do K25, or one type of coater. (I have K25 cartons in my little collection saying "Made in USA", and "Made in England", and I'm fairly sure I once saw "Made in France", though the latter may have been Kodachrome II. Or perhaps the films were made in US and packed in other countries ? )
Yes, makes sense, C41 is essentially a print film, but with today's digital scanners, is negative really cruical?Presumably that casual shooters preferred paper prints, and the negative films were much more forgiving of poor exposure and handling issues. Also a slide is normally a single original, while a negative allows any number of good quality first-generation prints to be made.
Yes, makes sense, C41 is essentially a print film, but with today's digital scanners, is negative really cruical?
Even today most C41 is just developed, and then printed digitally at most labs.
Yes, makes sense, C41 is essentially a print film, but with today's digital scanners, is negative really cruical?
Even today most C41 is just developed, and then printed digitally at most labs.
The dynamic range of negatives is superior to slides, and this has nothing to do with scanning. Also, color negatives are masked for dye impurities whereas slides are not, meaning better color quaility when optical printing (there are those who still do that) and I would think theoretically better even when scanning, although I don't scan them so I am not sure. The high contrast of slides can also be an issue when printing and perhaps scanning, and is generally less desirable for people pictures. Negatives are just a safer bet to use for just about everything except direct viewing or projection.Yes, makes sense, C41 is essentially a print film, but with today's digital scanners, is negative really cruical?
Even today most C41 is just developed, and then printed digitally at most labs.
Readily available and cheaper processing is the main advantage for me, but i still prefer the colour of slide films, and i dont care what anyone says, but this stuff is as grainy as hell, even portra is showing heavy grain when scanned.If you don't care about projecting slides, then C41 is more or less all you need. Superior exposure latitude, still widely available processing and much lower prices. What's not to like?
Am I right in thinking that most labs scan the neg, then exposure onto "real" photo paper with 3-color lasers ? Then chemically process the paper as normal ?
You may find that the grain is so fine on Portra and Ektar that your scanner is showing some aliasing due to its quality. I have seen some outstanding drum scans of C41 films even as long ago as 20 years!!
PE
I suck at scanning, and had no obvious "grain" with various c-41 films, including Portra. I used a Canoscan 8600F at it's highest "optical" resolution. It was my first time color processing, so I'm sure the negatives could have been better. When I zoomed in, I saw "noise," not grain. I can identify "noise" in electronics, and with old or improperly exposed color film, but I'm not sure I even know what grain looks like on a properly-exposed modern color film (my compliments to the C-41 chefs).
I can't wait until I learn to print these.
I suck at scanning, and had no obvious "grain" with various c-41 films, including Portra. I used a Canoscan 8600F at it's highest "optical" resolution. It was my first time color processing, so I'm sure the negatives could have been better. When I zoomed in, I saw "noise," not grain. I can identify "noise" in electronics, and grain in old or improperly exposed color film, but I'm not sure I even know what grain looks like on a properly-exposed modern color film (my compliments to the C-41 chefs).
I can't wait until I learn to print these.
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