Hi, could anyone explain, in simple, non-mathematical and non-scientifc way, i.e. so artists can understand
)
, what the "toe and shoulder" of films is (I think I know but would like to be sure) plus which modern colour negative films, maybe all of them? give us detail between these toe and shoulder limits.....perhaps then someone can talk to me about Portra 160NC in particular.....
I understand it to be where the highlights block off to white and the shadows block off to black on a given tonality curve so to speak....hence the toe would be the bottom part of any curve and the shoulder the top part....im guessing they use the analogy of a shoulder because in an 's' curve, for example it sort of looks like a shoulder.....(and this is the part where Im hoping what I'm saying is not cracking you all up in fits of laughter!)
In particular, with colour negative film its interesting to hear the detail in both the highlights and the shadows fall within the linear part of any given curve and not on either the shoulder or the toe and thus colour negative film yields a bigger range of possibilities (loosely translated from Photo Engineer's interview on Inside Analog Photo Radio interview)



I understand it to be where the highlights block off to white and the shadows block off to black on a given tonality curve so to speak....hence the toe would be the bottom part of any curve and the shoulder the top part....im guessing they use the analogy of a shoulder because in an 's' curve, for example it sort of looks like a shoulder.....(and this is the part where Im hoping what I'm saying is not cracking you all up in fits of laughter!)
In particular, with colour negative film its interesting to hear the detail in both the highlights and the shadows fall within the linear part of any given curve and not on either the shoulder or the toe and thus colour negative film yields a bigger range of possibilities (loosely translated from Photo Engineer's interview on Inside Analog Photo Radio interview)
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