and what can you tell me about sensia 100. i've shot 1 roll of it but those days i didn't know how to expose correctly. The price of the slide also matters to me, because additionally processing is expensive. thanks
and what can you tell me about sensia 100.
Kodachrome. Use it while you can, for the rest of the year. I think it's the best for natural colour portraits. After that, Provia & Astia.slides, but with very natural colors (for people photography).
Fuji have always been the most natural since E4 days
Ian
Kidding, right?
If you can still find some (it was discontinued late last year), Ektachrome 100 Plus (EPP) was the most natural film made since Ektachrome 100 EPN was discontinued.
No, many in the UK preferred Fuji slide films because they gave more faithful colour rendering.
Ian
Maybe because of the frequent cloudiness?
I mean, I don't like Velvia much, but under heavy cloud cover it shines.
No, many in the UK preferred Fuji slide films because they gave more faithful colour rendering.
I too find that cloudy skies don't significantly affect the performance of velvia, and indeed it can do very nice things with low contrast scenes. I learned that under very cloudy skies in Arizona.
Anyway, my preferred flavour of velvia is velvia 100, and it should be noted that that many of the hardened opinions on velvia are based on early velvia 50... not 100 or 100F. Anyway, velvia and skintones... not good! Velvia 100F if you must, but I wouldn't unless the surrounding environment had really compelling reasons to do so e.g. verdant rice paddies in Indonesia or something like that!
Provia's colour accuracy is good if the colour temp of the light is bang on 5000 K. But it tends to blue up on me for almost any light that I like to shoot with. In my opinion it is not a good choice unless you colour meter. Actually I prefer the colour rendition of 400x to provia 100F. 400x is the bomb.
On the other hand, astia 100F has worked well for me in very challenging light, even quite mixed. Attached is a very recent example from a camping trip. Broad daylight and very deep shadows, white whites, but notice that the skintones are quite good, not requiring any adjustments. You may not be able to tell form the attachment, but the shadow detail is mostly all there and the highlights are good too. This was high noon light.
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