- Joined
- Jul 14, 2011
- Messages
- 15,163
- Format
- 8x10 Format
I hit my stride today. Two quite different images. The first is from a recent series of floral and architectural street shots handheld on rainy days with my Nikon and an old single-coated lens having a color rendering I like. Moderate contrast lighting ratios shot with Ektar film. 8X enlargement, which is about as big as I like to go with 35mm. Maxima proved to be a very good fit for that level of magnification with punchy Ektar.
The second image was a sheet of 8x10 Ektar which I presumed was outdated, and gambled with for a very difficult shot. It was inside a giant burnt out redwood tree stump, almost dark in there. I'm really surprised I even got the composition right along with acute focus. The long exposure was a complete guesstimate with respect to reciprocity failure correction. I opted for a KR3 warming filter due to the intense blue of the shadows under an open blue sky. The charred wood had iridescent blue and violet shades, offset by patches of blue-green fluorescent algae (really difficult to capture on color film), plus a little bit of green moss, with a range of other color accents (and plenty of near blackness).
I'm sure any other photographer who sees the 20X24 Maxima print will accuse me of some kind of Photoshop hanky-panky. But it truly was an otherworldly looking little scene in a burnt out nook in what was once a giant tree. There is a slight exaggeration of the cyan elements - but that's characteristic of Ektar film itself. I don't think any other color paper could have pulled off the full gamma of those hues, except for related Fujiflex Supergloss. Now I'm tempted to make a 24X30 print of it too.
The second image was a sheet of 8x10 Ektar which I presumed was outdated, and gambled with for a very difficult shot. It was inside a giant burnt out redwood tree stump, almost dark in there. I'm really surprised I even got the composition right along with acute focus. The long exposure was a complete guesstimate with respect to reciprocity failure correction. I opted for a KR3 warming filter due to the intense blue of the shadows under an open blue sky. The charred wood had iridescent blue and violet shades, offset by patches of blue-green fluorescent algae (really difficult to capture on color film), plus a little bit of green moss, with a range of other color accents (and plenty of near blackness).
I'm sure any other photographer who sees the 20X24 Maxima print will accuse me of some kind of Photoshop hanky-panky. But it truly was an otherworldly looking little scene in a burnt out nook in what was once a giant tree. There is a slight exaggeration of the cyan elements - but that's characteristic of Ektar film itself. I don't think any other color paper could have pulled off the full gamma of those hues, except for related Fujiflex Supergloss. Now I'm tempted to make a 24X30 print of it too.
