Scotthenrylabonte
Member
What color negative film has the best dynamic range and exposure latitude ?
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Nice shots. I think it's probably true that cine film is going to be the best. Movies eat expensive film at an alarming rate. The cinematographer and director are not going to stop production for someone to make a meter reading of the clouds, the actors, etc. All they want is to make sure the principals are well lighted, and they depend on the film's dynamic range/exposure latitude to take care of all the exposure variables.
What color negative film has the best dynamic range and exposure latitude ?
I remember reading a Tim Parkin article in which his tests showed Portra 400 was capable of recording around 17 or 18 stops.
Just getting "something" on the film does not equate to decently REPRODUCIBLE color or detail !!!!!!!
I'll just say that what some people call digitally recovering or correcting something way off in exposure to begin with is sorta like microwaving the same stale TV dinner over and over again, or using the same dirty dishwater for another month. In the case of CN film you get serious curve crossover issues, or "mud" as I tend to term it, along with inevitable grain artifacts. And with reference to mud, it's really more like concrete : once all the cement, sand, and gravel hardens up together, you're not going to realistically get them apart. Or at least, it would be a thousand times easier to simply correctly expose the film in the first place than to try to post-correct it. "Digital post-correction" is far too often simply a poor excuse for sloppiness. Real light meters were invented for a reason.
I'll just say that what some people call digitally recovering or correcting something way off in exposure to begin with is sorta like microwaving the same stale TV dinner over and over again, or using the same dirty dishwater for another month. In the case of CN film you get serious curve crossover issues, or "mud" as I tend to term it, along with inevitable grain artifacts. And with reference to mud, it's really more like concrete : once all the cement, sand, and gravel hardens up together, you're not going to realistically get them apart. Or at least, it would be a thousand times easier to simply correctly expose the film in the first place than to try to post-correct it. "Digital post-correction" is far too often simply a poor excuse for outright sloppiness. Real light meters were invented for a reason.
So GLS - I'm aware that Tim wouldn't imply any "usable" film range that extreme, just that something was there. But from any reasonable standpoint, actual color repro quality is the only way to express CN film "dynamic range" without being misleading. That has always been the case from any professional standpoint. If what is in the extremes is effectively worthless, why bother? The manufacturers published film curves don't take extremes into account, at least at the upper end. Even with black and white film, that's the case. I certainly know how to use a densitometer and make plots, but also realize just because something is measurable doesn't mean its usable in any ordinary fashion.
And if you want to talk about "murky", its not the vocabulary as much as the inevitable mess that gross exposure errors themselves introduce. Sure, I get pushback to that opinion all the time nowadays; but I also scratch my head over just how mediocre and fake so much of that "digitally corrected" stuff really looks, especially via inkjet. People need to do their homework in advance, and not think their software is a miracle-working Wizard of Oz in the land of make-believe. Time to wake up in Kansas. Besides, this is on the "analog" side of the border, and I think in terms of real prints, not vacuous cyber-pixels lost in the cloud somewhere, along with instantly vaporizing crypto-currency.
Sure, breaking the rules and having fun with film is a legitimate activity if that is your goal to begin with. But if so, why do people whine and complain so much about the result, and go around constantly accusing Kodak and others of incompetence? Or why do they think they need to post correct it? If people like dirty dishwater and photographic mush, they have that right. But then why has Kodak spent decades trying to develop film more and more immune to that? But yeah, perhaps more than ever, lets be happy that 99% of photos stay in the cyber realm and never disgrace actual photo paper. And I very much doubt that disposable camera film is keeping Kodak afloat, ever has, or ever will. Let's face it, the era of cell phone photography has arrived, and those are good for something else too, like skipping across ponds and cutely sinking. But I don't even know how to take a cell phone photo, so am satisfied with real pebbles for ponds - they're a lot cheaper. Disposable cameras tend to float, so aren't as much fun.
For a visual of portra 160 range, this was shot directly into the sun. The waterfall was in deep shadow. I metered for the shadows, highlights were maintained. All of this was a single exposure, scanned with a kodak pakon f135+. Canon 7ne film back and I believe the 24-105L w/ CPL. I just love this film!
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