Lachlan Young
Member
It was also quite grainy. Prints (RA-4) produced of my South Pacific trip in 1994 are jarringly grainy against prints made from RDPIII or RVP50. An anaemic palette, though giving the neutral colours you speak of, was not what people wanted then, or even now.
Weird - Astia seemed definitely finer grained than Velvia (50, 100) to me - and the data sheets suggest that too - RMS 7 for Astia & 9 for RVP-50. I'd suspect whatever the intermediate stage used to make those RA-4's was responsible - be it an interneg or a scanner & output device. That said, Velvia 50 does have a big sharpness boost like Kodachrome in the sub 20 LP/mm range, which neither Velvia 100 nor Astia have or had - they are more in line with a lot of Ektachrome MTF curves in that regard. I vastly preferred Astia (and 120 Superia 400) to any of Fuji's other ideas of 'good' colour. But then again, I found that Ektachrome in most of its latter forms was generally more to my colour tastes anyway - and the Portras & Ektar even more so. Then again, I also liked some of the early 2000's Agfa slower neg & pos stocks...