Thank you for your responses. But they make me feel I need to be more specific:
If you took a color and values test chart, shot it on vision3 5219, then printed to vision premier 2393, you would get a particular result. There are specific properties to this particular result. There is a look to that particular result. And a photographer using this combo would be shooting/lighting/exposing with that look in mind. It is a particular look. A base. A particular tonality and color that the photographer is aware of. A particular contrast. A particular result. Despite any later manipulations, he is shooting for a base. A result. I want that base look. I want a color print film/photographic paper combination that would produce the closest result to the particular result of 5219+premier, if they were, for instance, both shooting the same test chart under similar exposure conditions. There is a specific tonality and saturation underneath/on top of all possible manipulations, and I'd like to have it because it effects the contrast of things in a particular way from the get-go that gives them a particular look. No matter how much you effect the image later or before, that look is, most likely gonna be a little baked in. And I've noticed that, and I like it. I'm after it. (if any of that made sense... heh.)
Is anyone familiar with the look to the contrast and color of a 5219+premier 2393 combo, and if so, is there a photographic film+photographic paper combo that mimics it most?
Hey Newt,
I'm actually only wanting a few occasional reference frames to create LUTs, and am hoping for a cheap, somewhat-immeditely-do-able solution, which is why I am currently hoping for an alternative to the sure-fire, though tedious solution. But yes, that might be the only available spot-on way of doing this. And your second suggestion, heh, takes too much time and work! And probably wouldn't reach the level of high similarity I'm hoping for. But without much experience, how can I know that?... Maybe this is just hopeless, and if I really want particular/exact results, I should just go for the 100'...
Hello Athiril,
I enjoy the look of color corrected, raw scanned footage in general. Unfortunately, it's not what I'm after anymore. (At least I think not.) I think my above specifyings were most in response the the 2nd half of your post, actually. The mentality of what you're suggesting is odd, isn't it? Surely the print film adds its share of definition to the look of things, knowing how it will effect the image even in the production stages. And grading manipulations are done mostly when the contrasty result is off in some way, but the expectation is for it to be on. For it to do what it's expected to do, and shoot/light/expose a scene to that. For it to place a certain, expected contrasting effect on the negative's tonality and color. The reason a specific print film takes part in the definition of the look is the way in which it effects natural tonality from the getgo. In the physical world, light's gonna do what it's gonna do. We can only manipulate that in so many ways. There's not so much we can do in natural real life to negate something like the global contrast curves of a print film (and without negating it, it is enforcing an effect to the look). That's why there will always be a look to particular print film. Or any recording medium. There will always be an effect on the look that specifically comes from the film that no matter how much you calibrate, in real life: the exposure, or the type of lighting, etc... Even in non real life... the only way would be the use of extremely specific negating curves within software. Other, more minor adjustments still wouldn't do too much to negate those characteristic curves.
...
What am I even talking about anymore? I bet you we actually see things similarly and have only misunderstood eachother's thoughts.
Mustafa...
Hey MDR,
Was actually looking through their pages before my first post! I will ask their opinion/possibilities on this too, thanks for the suggestion. At the moment, I'm too unlearned and lazy for your second suggestion! I shouldn't be hoping for a fast-food sort of solution, but I still am. Something unrealistically simple like:
"I've always felt Kodak Portra 400 really resembles theatrical print qualities! Especially in the saturation distribution and luminosity! Almost every frame I've taken with that printed on Ilfochrome has the texture, contrast, and color of modern cinema, imho!"
Ha? No... Maybe?
Thanks again y'all.