In the late 70s Agfa made a full page ad for Agfachrome, with part of the page filled with a full size photo of a trout with next to it the circumference of the trout in dottet line. The reader was asked to lay a real trout in that field and compare ...... but back then only Kodachrome and Agfachrome. Mainly Kodachrome, but I preferred Agfachrome for people and some landscapes.
So when you project them using a projector with a halogen lamp, the Nikon slides will look natural, and the Canon slides will look garishJudging solely from my high-quality 4X loupes, the Nikon seems cold & dull, while the Canon seems warm & downright delightful.
Don't know if you are mocking your question or the responses, or just jerking everyone's chain.This should be known as the JOKETRIO site.
This is another one of chip's joke threads. We await "what kind of camera dials do you prefer?" and "left or right hand focus?"
I agree it can. My Nikon, Canon, Yashica/Contax, Minolta and soviet lenses all render colour slightly differently, but an opinion on which is best would be purely subjective...one man's meat. Do you like cool and neutral, super saturated, warm and honey coloured? Add the natural film colours and you have virtually endless combinations.However with a slide being the final product, a lens can have some influence.
In my experience, variation in color rendering among various brand lens is much more subtle than this.Do you like cool and neutral, super saturated, warm and honey coloured?
In addition to film, I've tested my lenses on the digital. With the same sensor there are noticeable differences, in the case of Yashica a completely different look. Nothing you can't compensate for by changing film brands or tweaks in the edit. Who knows what other people like, or even if they perceive colour the same way?In my experience, variation in color rendering among various brand lens is much more subtle than this.
Choose wisely, Irving Pen did...What brand of 35mm SLR lenses do you prefer for slides?
I first thought, yes, a typical Chip question. However with a slide being the final product, a lens can have some influence.
A hue can easily be filtered out in a neg/pos process, for slides one would have to use a CC filter at taking.
However when looking at a slide in ambient lighting, room and projector lighting are of effect too.
Low saturation of a lens would affect both neg.pos process as a slide.
The two issues you brought up, dials and left or right focusing, are even more reasonable questions.
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