fotoobscura
Subscriber
I am a big fan of fast color film and have been shooting it, especially in broad daylight, for many years. I like (reasonably) grainy color.
Anyhow, I recently bought a roll of Superia 1600 online as it had been a while since I've shot it. It was expired 10/14 and quite expensive for an expired film (> $12). I was promised by the seller that the film was stored properly. I shot a roll of it at a concert and the images came out horribly. The grain was unacceptably high and the film looked underexposed. Developed 38.8C, 3.5M, fresh C41.
I shot a roll of Natura 1600 in mixed light from daylight to dusk, developed 38.8C, 4M, also very grainy and the color was poor. This was not expired.
I've been shooting Portra 800 @ 1600 and souping 3.5M-4.5M in C41 chemistry for years. The output is fantastic- fine grain, smooth tones, great color.
I'm just trying to figure out if I'm missing something or I've hit such a sweet spot with Portra that nothing else can be compared to..
Thank you.
Anyhow, I recently bought a roll of Superia 1600 online as it had been a while since I've shot it. It was expired 10/14 and quite expensive for an expired film (> $12). I was promised by the seller that the film was stored properly. I shot a roll of it at a concert and the images came out horribly. The grain was unacceptably high and the film looked underexposed. Developed 38.8C, 3.5M, fresh C41.
I shot a roll of Natura 1600 in mixed light from daylight to dusk, developed 38.8C, 4M, also very grainy and the color was poor. This was not expired.
I've been shooting Portra 800 @ 1600 and souping 3.5M-4.5M in C41 chemistry for years. The output is fantastic- fine grain, smooth tones, great color.
I'm just trying to figure out if I'm missing something or I've hit such a sweet spot with Portra that nothing else can be compared to..
Thank you.
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