fattening up 500t or 200t?
Moderator: Andreas Wideroe
fattening up 500t or 200t?
anybody shoot these two stocks a stop over? were the results much better?
double super8!
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I always shoot 1/2 over - you definitely don't want to underexpose.
Matt
Matt
Birmingham UK.
http://www.wells-photography.co.uk
Avatar: Kenneth Moore (left) with producers (centre) discussing forthcoming film to be financed by my grandfather (right) C.1962
http://www.wells-photography.co.uk
Avatar: Kenneth Moore (left) with producers (centre) discussing forthcoming film to be financed by my grandfather (right) C.1962
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I don't want to say that you DON'T want to underexpose. Without knowing what you are shooting it is hard to say...
That is why you need to do your own tests.
Then picking where in the latitude you want to be. If you need to be on the darker side then find that exposure.
Whilst 80-90% of the time I like to over expose slightly some of the best shots I have gotten were when I was about a stop under. Then again it fit for the work I was doing.
Good Luck
That is why you need to do your own tests.
Then picking where in the latitude you want to be. If you need to be on the darker side then find that exposure.
Whilst 80-90% of the time I like to over expose slightly some of the best shots I have gotten were when I was about a stop under. Then again it fit for the work I was doing.
Good Luck
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Shooting Kodak VISION2 200T Color Negative Film 7217 with the recommended 85 filter in daylight illumination makes it equivalent to a EI-125 daylight balance film:Mogzy wrote:So, what would the results be like if I shot it in a camera which will rate 200T at 100ASA with 85 filter? Hiow many stops over exposure does that work out at?
http://www.kodak.com/US/en/motion/produ ... 10.4&lc=en
John Pytlak
EI Customer Technical Services
Research Lab, Building 69
Eastman Kodak Company
Rochester, NY 14650-1922 USA
EI Customer Technical Services
Research Lab, Building 69
Eastman Kodak Company
Rochester, NY 14650-1922 USA
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underexposing negative can create interesting looks in high brightness situations. you don't need to worry about getting a thin neg or shadow grain if you're shooting backlit and flared out snowboarding. a slight underexposure will make such scenes softer and more pastel. rating normal and pull processing would probably be better but just underexposing works too.
/matt
/matt
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Underexposure pushes more scene information onto the lower contrast "toe" of a color negative film's sensitivity characteristic. So the shadows will have lower contrast with less detail. Black areas may become lower in density or "milky" in the final print or transfer. The larger, faster grains in the "toe" will be more visible.mattias wrote:underexposing negative can create interesting looks in high brightness situations. you don't need to worry about getting a thin neg or shadow grain if you're shooting backlit and flared out snowboarding. a slight underexposure will make such scenes softer and more pastel. rating normal and pull processing would probably be better but just underexposing works too.
/matt
John Pytlak
EI Customer Technical Services
Research Lab, Building 69
Eastman Kodak Company
Rochester, NY 14650-1922 USA
EI Customer Technical Services
Research Lab, Building 69
Eastman Kodak Company
Rochester, NY 14650-1922 USA
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the woy from Germany posted a demo of Kodak VISION2 200T with a variety of exposure conditions in this thread:francis wrote:ok, but has anybody gone a stop over with these stocks and checked out the results?
viewtopic.php?t=12761&start=15
The outdoor scenes look very good with some overexposure. Here's the demo:
http://www.found-footage.de/muster2.mpg
John Pytlak
EI Customer Technical Services
Research Lab, Building 69
Eastman Kodak Company
Rochester, NY 14650-1922 USA
EI Customer Technical Services
Research Lab, Building 69
Eastman Kodak Company
Rochester, NY 14650-1922 USA
i was actually asking if anybody did it in the two s8 neg stocks...wanted to know what they looked like directly since i know it worked for 16mm. wanted an opinion.
but hey thanks mattias, you have been truely helpfull as you always are with many of your comments that you offer to the browsers of the site.
but hey thanks mattias, you have been truely helpfull as you always are with many of your comments that you offer to the browsers of the site.
double super8!
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The great latitude of all the Kodak VISION2 Camera Negative Films is such that they can tolerate considerable overexposure. As noted, increasing exposure places more scene information on the finer-grained mid and slow emulsions used in each film. The only issue is not to overexpose the the extent that the negative becomes so dense that it will not print within the normal range of printer adjustment, or is too dense to transfer without getting into electronic noise issues on older telecines. One stop of overexposure is almost always "safe territory" to reduce graininess without getting into other issues.
John Pytlak
EI Customer Technical Services
Research Lab, Building 69
Eastman Kodak Company
Rochester, NY 14650-1922 USA
EI Customer Technical Services
Research Lab, Building 69
Eastman Kodak Company
Rochester, NY 14650-1922 USA