I shoot and print Ektar all the time. I can't afford to bracket or guess or screw up - 8x10 is my primary format. I've done dozens of tests some of you have never even thought of. I have exceptionally precise custom additive colorheads. The fact is, in the real world, Ektar has just a little more range than some chrome films. Beyond that, you get into hue shifts. If it's a modest contrast scene, sure you can fudge the exposure a bit. But in full contrast, it's easy to go off a cliff. I shoot at high altitude a lot, and know from hard experience that Ektar needs just as much care in exposure as slide film. Yes, you can bend the rules, but I already know what happens when people do that - they often end up calling it an awful film or try to torture it back into shape in PS, unnecessarily, unsuccessfully. This is a film capable of rendering certain complex hues more accurately and cleanly than even chrome films, and I'm not speaking of just saturated colors, but subtle neutrals. There's more to it than just balancing a gray scale! But if you want to cut corners, fine. Just don't complain to me about all the cyan contamination in this or that color.