I Second That Emulsion (a film thread)

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mostly im guessing (whatever it would be w/ 200 plus a three stops/shutter speeds up) but sometimes i use the lightmeter app on my iphone. im trying to guess mostly, i want to get good at guessing. also thankyou!!!

plax (ico), Monday, 7 March 2011 23:15 (thirteen years ago) link

i shot a load of film today and im gonna double expose it w/ flowers from the park tomorrow!

plax (ico), Monday, 7 March 2011 23:16 (thirteen years ago) link

nj plax - looks like you got a great camera

Neu! romancer (dayo), Monday, 7 March 2011 23:31 (thirteen years ago) link

Nice guessing in that case!

lou reed scott walker monks niagra (chinavision!), Monday, 7 March 2011 23:40 (thirteen years ago) link

lovin these

just sayin, Tuesday, 8 March 2011 08:48 (thirteen years ago) link

what film are you using plax

just sayin, Tuesday, 8 March 2011 09:17 (thirteen years ago) link

the guy with the beard, the tube station and the barrier in st. pauls are all 1600iso fuji superia, the taxi, the windows, the tree and the blue fence are all Boots own brand 200iso (i have been told that this is just repackaged fuji superia btw)

plax (ico), Tuesday, 8 March 2011 11:10 (thirteen years ago) link

really? good to know. boots always has heaps of old film sitting around

just sayin, Tuesday, 8 March 2011 11:14 (thirteen years ago) link

you can buy the pack of five for like £8 and its always in the 3 for 2 so it really works out at fifteen rolls for abt £17 and i think its really good film for that price

plax (ico), Tuesday, 8 March 2011 11:21 (thirteen years ago) link

daaamn thats cheap

just sayin, Tuesday, 8 March 2011 11:35 (thirteen years ago) link

four weeks pass...

you can buy the pack of five for like £8 and its always in the 3 for 2 so it really works out at fifteen rolls for abt £17 and i think its really good film for that price

the slide film that's in this offer is process-paid, btw - have never done anything other than cross-process slide film before, but have recently shot & received slides for three rolls. it's fun.

kinda looking for some interesting new film to try (now the sun is coming out). anyone got any favourites? i bought a roll of ektar a while back & loved it. i like having additional variables that i can accredit/blame my variable photography on.

your LiveJournal experience (schlump), Tuesday, 5 April 2011 14:28 (thirteen years ago) link

what type of film do you like to use?

dayo, Tuesday, 5 April 2011 14:37 (thirteen years ago) link

mm, either high or low speed, really; i've kinda given up on using black and white under 400, because it's too grey. so ilford delta 3200 or fuji neopan 1600 for b/w. for colour i tend to just get some fuji thing, though have shot a bunch of agfa and stuff? kodak ektar 100 was a real highlight and was way crisper than anything i usually end up with.

was maybe going to get a roll of portra 800.

what do you like to use, dayo? i've seen a bunch of your b/w stuff & am curious.

your LiveJournal experience (schlump), Tuesday, 5 April 2011 14:46 (thirteen years ago) link

oh & also, expired probably should've been a suffix to all of the above, the expired box being where most of mine comes from, ordinarily.

your LiveJournal experience (schlump), Tuesday, 5 April 2011 14:46 (thirteen years ago) link

I use neopan 400, at either box speed or pushed to 1600. do you self-develop? I find delta 3200 to be the king of being too grey! neopan 1600 has been discontinued :(

I mess around with 100 speed films but I can't think of anything to shoot when I use them, they're more of a novelty factor. I've tried APX100, acros, have got 3 rolls of rollei retro 80s that I don't know what to do with. Lucky 100 gives a really old school look.

dayo, Tuesday, 5 April 2011 14:54 (thirteen years ago) link

for color negatives, since I scan I find them all to be much of a muchness - it's hard to get good scans from a color neg, so I just pick up the cheapest big name color film I can find, which is fuji xtra 400 at the moment.

dayo, Tuesday, 5 April 2011 14:58 (thirteen years ago) link

neopan 1600 has been discontinued :(

no shit, that's terrible. i used to think it had the edge over the ilford, pretty much. the kinda extreme, high-contrast b/w aesthetic sometimes feels sorta passé, now, but film that pretty much separates into diffused blacks and whites is still what i want a lot of the time, and gives you some freedom to just shoot wherever. kinda can't imagine how you found it too grey!, it has no midtones afaic.

i've played with some 100s pushed up a few speeds but haven't seen the results yet - that kinda camera-math is a bit beyond me, really, i don't quite know how it all works. i just take my prints to the shop, also, btw.

your LiveJournal experience (schlump), Tuesday, 5 April 2011 15:22 (thirteen years ago) link

HP5+ was always the king of too grey for me.
tbh, I'd probably prefer that now - with any kind of scanning I'd rather have a low-contrast negative that can be worked on.

boots get knocked from here to czechoslovakier (milo z), Tuesday, 5 April 2011 15:29 (thirteen years ago) link

I've only shot three rolls of HP5+ but I really liked the results, it seemed very bright and crisp - I'd shoot it if neopan 400 wasn't nearly half the price.

yeah neopan 1600 had a true film speed of about 640, so when you push it to 1600 or 3200 it gets this 'film noir' look about it. neopan 400 is basically the same thing when pushed. I've still about 12 rolls of 1600 that I'm using for a project.

delta 3200 is so low-contrast it's incredible, it scans as this one big pile of grey. I think that's how they get it to push to 3200 or 6400.

I've been playing around with agitation this week, added just one more inversion per minute and I'm getting nice contrasty negatives straight out of the scanner with HC110. I like it. I'm kind of worried, because so far the majority of my negs have been developed for low contrast (for scanning) so I don't know how they'll come out in a darkroom.

dayo, Tuesday, 5 April 2011 23:37 (thirteen years ago) link

You non-grey people are nuts! I often simply use Tri-X because it's common and (for me, who never shoots faster than ISO 400) fast, but I love using FP4 to get those grey grey midtones. And if it's not grey enough then I'll grey it up a bit.

http://farm6.static.flickr.com/5013/5564033333_fe837fd679.jpg

MIDS!

For color I stick to Ektar or Portra 160NC to stay low-contrast and low-grain. If I'm cheap I'll by Fuji Superia, but the colors in my lab scans don't look so hot then. I know that I need a scanner of my own... It's next on the list.

lou reed scott walker monks niagra (chinavision!), Wednesday, 6 April 2011 01:56 (thirteen years ago) link

three weeks pass...

So who here scans negatives (or positives)? What do you use and what's your workflow?
I bought a Plustek Opticfilm because my lab scans often featured blown out highlights or clipped blacks and poor color balance. I can now control that a bit better, but my workflow is terrible and slow and I think I should be able to speed it up.
What resolution are you satisfied with, etc?

CURIOUS!

lou reed scott walker monks niagra (chinavision!), Saturday, 30 April 2011 18:08 (twelve years ago) link

I haven't scanned in ages - my last was a Nikon Coolscan IV, IIRC, circa 2002. Back then it was just too much work keeping the negatives spot free.

Resolution wise, the Epson flatbeds get ~2400dpi and the Plustek dedicated 35mm scanners get ~3600dpi (real world, rather than the state resolutions) - you can (roughly) divide that by 300dpi to get the native enlargement (ie a medium format 2.25x2.25 negative could be printed 18x18inches from an Epson v750, under perfect scanning conditions, a 35mm negative could be enlarged 12x via the Plustek, etc.).

You can probably fudge that and go a bit larger as long as you're not doing something with a lot of fine detail.

I'd like to get back into shooting film and scanning it (and being able to scan all my old negatives and slides), but I'm about to be moving into a new place that's going to cost $300-400 more a month, so I doubt I'll be able to shoot film at all, much less buy a scanner.

boots get knocked from here to czechoslovakier (milo z), Saturday, 30 April 2011 18:55 (twelve years ago) link

I'm pretty committed to film at this point, so the scanner is my attempt to make the process cheaper (lab scans cost too much). Now my struggle is to develop a quick-ish method of working that gets whole rolls scanned in acceptable resolution. Most of the stuff only goes on the web, and I can't imagine printing larger than 12" x 8" so I suppose the resolution I get from the Plustek is fine.
I just had an opportunity to pick up the scanner for not-so-much and had visions of cheap development. After having some rolls mauled at Walgreens and a couple 1-hour spots though I've sworn off non-pro labs.

lou reed scott walker monks niagra (chinavision!), Saturday, 30 April 2011 23:24 (twelve years ago) link

which Plustek did you get?

I own a Epson V700, that I'm gonna sell when I leave this place. it's been good to me but it's been in the shop once for service and will likely go again before I go, so I don't end up stiffing the buyer. other people on the web have mentioned quality control issues.

I really like it and all the shots on the web I have were done using it. sharpness isn't *great* but acceptable - not as good as the minolta dual scan IV which I owned a few years ago, but more than good enough for making webshots.

process wise, it's nice - it does 24 35mm frames in about ~40 minutes, so you can do a roll in about an hour, an hour and a half. 120's much quicker, the scanner only has to make 12 passes.

I find that it's great with b&w negative, kinda lousy with color negatives and slides. although from what I gather, scanning color negatives is hard no matter what you do - need to figure out the correct color balance, probably need to use Vuescan or some other professional software (I use epsonscan because it's convenient). slides just come out looking soft, it seems, though I haven't really tried fiddling with the settings for that either.

br8080 (dayo), Saturday, 30 April 2011 23:59 (twelve years ago) link

Gonna head out the door in a sec, but I'm using the Opticfilm 7600i, the one that is bundled with the full version of Silverfast. I've been getting decent color scans with it, but not *great*. I think I'm figuring out more as I go along though. It definitely takes some time spent fiddling!

lou reed scott walker monks niagra (chinavision!), Sunday, 1 May 2011 00:05 (twelve years ago) link

yeah I had a pro lab scan some slides/negatives and then compared them with my own V700 scans - difference between night and day! OTOH they know what they're doing.

br8080 (dayo), Sunday, 1 May 2011 00:10 (twelve years ago) link

color slides/negatives, that is.

br8080 (dayo), Sunday, 1 May 2011 00:10 (twelve years ago) link

probably the best digital film workflow would be v700/750 to make a rough digital 'contact sheet', then using a plustek or other dedicated 35mm scanner to make higher quality scans. I still think the old discontinued ones like the minolta dual scan IV offer amazing performance.

here's what I'm talking about re: the difference between my epson and the pro lab. I could probably get the V700 pretty close if I wanted to fiddle, but I'm not really that invested in my color shots. *shrug*

http://i.imgur.com/0JBRA.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/L71tG.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/ZNvjA.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/IEDNE.jpg

br8080 (dayo), Sunday, 1 May 2011 00:36 (twelve years ago) link

also if you want cheap development, and you don't mind supporting the eventual corporate takeover of the world, you could try wal-mart. they outsource all of the film developing to fuji by this point, takes about a week but if you request "develop only" it can be cheap, like $1 a roll - I was never able to get them to only develop though :/

you can also try one of the C-41 DIY kits from freestyle, I've heard that C-41 isn't nearly as fiddly as it seems.

br8080 (dayo), Sunday, 1 May 2011 00:43 (twelve years ago) link

Whenever I can afford to go back to film, I'll probably stick to medium format w/ a V700/V750, farm out drum scanning in the event that I ever want to make an enormous print.

that's assuming color MF film exists at the point in time :(

boots get knocked from here to czechoslovakier (milo z), Sunday, 1 May 2011 03:01 (twelve years ago) link

I just bought two rolls of 120 fuji t64 - tungsten film from an urban outfitters type store here. lol, but I'm curious to see how it responds in daylight. might cross process a roll as well.

br8080 (dayo), Sunday, 1 May 2011 03:54 (twelve years ago) link

I certainly do not get quite the same sharpness as my lab scans anymore, and I now have problems with color noise that I am trying to solve, but I now don't lose my highs and lows at the same rate as I used to:

lab scan:
http://www.altairnouveau.com/labscan.jpg

home scan:
http://www.altairnouveau.com/homescan.jpg

lou reed scott walker monks niagra (chinavision!), Sunday, 1 May 2011 15:35 (twelve years ago) link

Your lab scans are probably oversharpened, really - that was my experience with the Noritsu/Frontier automated scans, even at highest quality.

boots get knocked from here to czechoslovakier (milo z), Sunday, 1 May 2011 19:04 (twelve years ago) link

Oversharpened sounds right. Also too much contrast dialed in. I started asking for low contrast scans which were a little better but still sometimes featured clipped highlights. I am also stuck with a lens (Voigtlander 35mm) that is very contrasty and works better *without* adding on even more contrast on top. Thus the adventures in self-scanning.

lou reed scott walker monks niagra (chinavision!), Monday, 2 May 2011 00:17 (twelve years ago) link

which voigtlander 35mm do you have?

br8080 (dayo), Monday, 2 May 2011 01:36 (twelve years ago) link

I have the Color Skopar 35mm f2.5. Mostly because it was the cheapest 35 I could buy once I picked up the Leica. It works well and all, but I'd prefer a lower contrast lens. I'm thinking of selling it and applying the $$ towards a Summaron 35mm. I think lower contrast will just be a bit more forgiving for retaining shadow detail and I like the look more. The color skopar drops off to pure black *soo* fast. I don't have the same problem with my other cameras (mostly fixed lens rangefinders with (probably) single coated lenses), or the lenses that I use on my Pentax.

lou reed scott walker monks niagra (chinavision!), Monday, 2 May 2011 02:41 (twelve years ago) link

look into the canon rangefinder 35mm's. the 2.5 was based on the canon design. I have a 35mm 1.8 and it's nice and low-contrast. the summaron is nice too. I picked up a canon 35mm/2 which is supposed to be more modern and high contrast, haven't run a roll through it yet.

br8080 (dayo), Monday, 2 May 2011 03:07 (twelve years ago) link

but yeah I shot with a rollei 40mm/2.8 for a while, sooooo high contrast. sold it.

br8080 (dayo), Monday, 2 May 2011 03:07 (twelve years ago) link

Voigtlander makes single-coating versions of some of their lenses that will be more pleasing with film (particularly B&W). They're marked SC vs MC.

boots get knocked from here to czechoslovakier (milo z), Monday, 2 May 2011 06:03 (twelve years ago) link

yeah but they're still pretty high contrast, modern designs

br8080 (dayo), Monday, 2 May 2011 06:09 (twelve years ago) link

I think the 35mm/40mm 1.4s come in sc and mc versions

br8080 (dayo), Monday, 2 May 2011 06:15 (twelve years ago) link

Well, doing periodical B&H browsing yesterday I saw a 35mm f3.5 Summaron for $299 and without thinking bought it. It arrived today and is beautiful (on the outside at least!). I'll have to report back on how it looks! I know the f2.8 is the preferred version but I could not resist the immediacy of getting the thing the next day or the low price.
It is the version made for the M3 bayonet mount without goggles by the way. Meaning it focuses accurately but brings up 50mm framelines. I will have to decide whether I'd prefer to have a tech trim the lug to bring up 35mm framelines or just live with it (35mm framelines on an M2 are pretty much just the whole viewfinder anyway).

lou reed scott walker monks niagra (chinavision!), Tuesday, 3 May 2011 22:20 (twelve years ago) link

And Dayo, do you have shots with the Rollei? I used to use my dad's Rollei 35 when I was back in the Bay Area and compared to the Voigtlander lens it was *low* contrast. I had been keeping it in mind as a preferred look.

lou reed scott walker monks niagra (chinavision!), Tuesday, 3 May 2011 22:22 (twelve years ago) link

yeah, but I don't remember if I have any daylight film - the roll I know was took with the rollei was 400 pushed to 1600, so the contrast was exaggerated even more. it's supposedly the same lens design as the Rollei 35's but I think updated to modern performance standards.

congrats on the summaron! I hear that's a wonderful B&W lens.

dayo, Tuesday, 3 May 2011 23:46 (twelve years ago) link

hey photo bros, so my gf got me a canonet for my b-day + i got a couple of films developed + some of the pics in the second roll of film are all kind of blown-out in the white parts? and the thing is on the 2nd roll i was using a different type of film as well as a warming filter that i picked up.... so does a warming filter have that effect? or is it the film? or is it something else -
http://lh5.googleusercontent.com/_jTfWBcejvU8/TcGqFbgKK3I/AAAAAAAAAyU/0Xax-mtGmSg/s720/84970024.JPG

just sayin, Wednesday, 4 May 2011 19:37 (twelve years ago) link

Could well be the scans (basic developing lab scans tend to be extremely high contrast, per above), could be overexposure in the camera (old Canonet meters are a crapshoot). It doesn't look like the scene itself should have exceeded the dynamic range of color negative film, and even overexposed negative should hold some detail - so my money's on the scans.

boots get knocked from here to czechoslovakier (milo z), Wednesday, 4 May 2011 21:37 (twelve years ago) link

i got prints tho, and they looked the same... they still do prints straight from negatives right? or maybe not?

just sayin, Wednesday, 4 May 2011 21:53 (twelve years ago) link

Probably not. Prints are made from the quickie machine scans - been a while since optical enlargments were common.

boots get knocked from here to czechoslovakier (milo z), Thursday, 5 May 2011 00:06 (twelve years ago) link

i did not know that!

cop a cute abdomen (gbx), Thursday, 5 May 2011 00:17 (twelve years ago) link

aww, thanks a bunch. much more to come on flickr of course. btw i realized i may have been confusing above - none of these are from the big batch i got developed/scanned through those people (just me with my buddy the coolscan), so don't take them as samples of their work.

do the disposable cameras sooner rather than later! you seriously never know. IMO if there's one precious memory great shot buried in there it's so worth it.

i scanned a big bunch of high school negs the other week, not sure when i'll get around to processing them or what i'll do with them. i think all i had then was disposables. they're none of them "great photos" but definitely the kind of thing that folks on facebook may get a kick out of, might bring a smile to some people's faces, etc. that's a worthy thing. but only so many hours in the day. maybe i'll save them for twenty years out from graduation or something.

my other great "lost roll" - only one that's ever come back blank, crushingly - was from the end of summer 2008, mostly goofing around at coney island with a couple of good pals. i would love, love to see what was on that. sigh. really interesting to think that the memories of the day are heightened by taking but not having the photos. normally i think of photos as memory-prompts, gradually the days that were photographed come to call up (but also to stand in for) many other days and times. but perhaps a day that one THINKS about having photographed can actually work the same way. that's really interesting.

Gorefest Frump (Doctor Casino), Sunday, 23 August 2015 16:00 (eight years ago) link

cool stuff doctor casino

tender is the late-night daypart (schlump), Sunday, 23 August 2015 16:15 (eight years ago) link

Man, that makes me want to get a film camera and shoot. Are they still doing $12 all in plus shipping for the scans?

Kiarostami bag (milo z), Monday, 24 August 2015 03:02 (eight years ago) link

thanks y'all!

Yeah! I think you do have to be a registered RFF member and click through from their ad there, otherwise you won't find that item to add to your cart.

Gorefest Frump (Doctor Casino), Monday, 24 August 2015 15:14 (eight years ago) link

i've realized i should probably use a service like precision.

i had some developed negatives and went to a semiserious developing place today and got a price of 99 cents per frame for scanning to cd at "good" resolution, a buck something per exposure for "excellent" resolution ???? it's considerably cheaper if a develop/scan package for whatever reason (maybe there's a good reason that i'm unaware of).

dylannn, Saturday, 29 August 2015 06:24 (eight years ago) link

Well, it's a LOT simpler to feed film into a scanner before it's been cut and sleeved. That's probably the biggest reason, assuming it's not like a drug store deal where the sacns happen (as I understand it) in the same machine as developing (?).

I should revise up my Precision comments a bit - in the end they came through, clearly tried hard to unravel some crossed wires, and insisted on a partial refund even when I was like ahhh, whatever, it's fine.

Gorefest Frump (Doctor Casino), Saturday, 29 August 2015 12:22 (eight years ago) link


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