Patrick Dixon wrote:I think I'll stick to B&W.
That's a shame, I like the colour shots I've seen of yours.. even the ones with the colour casts on the garlic flowers (e.g. bottom left)


Patrick Dixon wrote:I think I'll stick to B&W.
I know - proves that if you're happy with the results it doesn't matter.. I imagine this looks pretty close to the transparency from what I know of E100VSPatrick Dixon wrote:Yeah, but I just chuck mine in an unprofiled 4990 and see what comes out.
And the film's out of date EV100VS ...
I started getting annoyed with some edge cases in scanning and this pushed me into looking into profiling (I didn't need much of a push being a complete geek though). Things like colour response in the shadows was annoying me, as was some colour shifts in very high toned areas of scans. I obviously had an extra need in that I'm going to offer my drum scanning services to people and they will expect to get what they see on a light box.AbsolutelyN wrote:All very interesting. Scanner profiling is an area Tim knows that I've not really got around to yet, I'm keen to look into it at some point however. It is certainly very impressive that Tim and Ian can both reproduce the images so consistently.
To me it all depends on your point of view and what you intend to do with the images. I'm not scanning other peoples negatives, or creating colour separations for publication and I have no need to ensure if this neg was scanned on another scanner they would get the same results.
For me personally it is just not critical - as long I can control the colour and make it look as I intend on screen and in print - that's what's important to me personally at the moment. And no I don't yet always get it rightYes profiling is ideally needed for those things but you can still get extremely good results without it. I guess it 's a whole new area to look into when needs, time and finance allows.
I use profiling just to make sure I get a base level clean negative scan. I've found I get better results out of colorneg if I scan my negatives as if they were a transparency and then invert using colorneg. Small colour shifts in the negative can create massive shifts in the final result.AbsolutelyN wrote:How about profiling for colour negatives though? I have my own methods of processing them which I'm very happy with but getting an accurate colour match between a series of negs can be very difficult unless they were taken on the same film at the same time, same processing and scanned together. Not that I need to do that often.
Hi Patrick - if I get anywhere with my research I'll be publishing my - "How the **** to scan negative film!" (I'm currently comparing all the colour negative and positive sheet film available for sheet film with the help of Digital Lab)Patrick Dixon wrote:I tried some colour neg stuff and gave up very quickly. Apart from the negatives looking absolutely horrid in their own right, it seemed you could very easily get every colour 'look' under the sun - except one that you could be happy with. I imagine if you can work out how to control the process it would be great, but for struggling amateurs like me, life is just too short.
Tim, Ben Anderson (flits in and out of the forum sometimes) has just blogged about some of his recent experiences with Colorneg, or ColorPerfect as it's known now.timparkin wrote:I might start a new topic asking how people invert their negatives..
Tim
Thanks Paul - just going to read now..Paul Mitchell wrote:Tim, Ben Anderson (flits in and out of the forum sometimes) has just blogged about some of his recent experiences with Colorneg, or ColorPerfect as it's known now.timparkin wrote:I might start a new topic asking how people invert their negatives..
Tim
http://benneh.net/blog/index.php/2010/0 ... t-a-guide/
Paul