thisneumann
Member
- Joined
- May 12, 2012
- Messages
- 6
- Format
- 35mm
I realize an answer to my question requires far more experience than I want to spend years gaining, so I figured I would register and ask more experienced people. Heh. I hope you'll excuse my laziness.
For stills photography, is there a particular color film and process/acquisition result that *most closely* resembles the tonality and color of motion picture film after it's been printed to a positive print? I'm particularly interested in the look of Vision negative to Vision Print. I even love the look of Vision negative to Vision Premier print as well.
I ask because in wanting to simply shoot cassettes using vision 3 film, I discovered that no company anywhere (even photo labs) will take that negative and reprint it to vision print on a cassette basis. What is that, 1.5 seconds to a motion picture lab company? So unconventional, heh. The demand for that is so incredibly low. Heck, even the demand for processing the negative alone is super low, on a cassette basis. And I'm not interested in the look of the negative film on it's own. I love the specifically contrasted, somewhat more natural magical movie tonality and saturation that comes with the print to vision print or vision premier.
What I'm having difficulty finding is un-colortimed footage. Pretty much everything on apple trailers is color timed and varied in gamma (as well as any images on the net for that matter). I suppose I'm just being optimistic that someone knows the look I mean... or perhaps knows the math of the contrasts and colors in a way that can be explained to someone less experienced.
...Basically, I'd like an easy answer where there isn't one. I guess subjective answers will work. I will try to give specific examples if my goal still seems obscure. Hoping you experts already have an idea.
For stills photography, is there a particular color film and process/acquisition result that *most closely* resembles the tonality and color of motion picture film after it's been printed to a positive print? I'm particularly interested in the look of Vision negative to Vision Print. I even love the look of Vision negative to Vision Premier print as well.
I ask because in wanting to simply shoot cassettes using vision 3 film, I discovered that no company anywhere (even photo labs) will take that negative and reprint it to vision print on a cassette basis. What is that, 1.5 seconds to a motion picture lab company? So unconventional, heh. The demand for that is so incredibly low. Heck, even the demand for processing the negative alone is super low, on a cassette basis. And I'm not interested in the look of the negative film on it's own. I love the specifically contrasted, somewhat more natural magical movie tonality and saturation that comes with the print to vision print or vision premier.
What I'm having difficulty finding is un-colortimed footage. Pretty much everything on apple trailers is color timed and varied in gamma (as well as any images on the net for that matter). I suppose I'm just being optimistic that someone knows the look I mean... or perhaps knows the math of the contrasts and colors in a way that can be explained to someone less experienced.
...Basically, I'd like an easy answer where there isn't one. I guess subjective answers will work. I will try to give specific examples if my goal still seems obscure. Hoping you experts already have an idea.