C-41 processing, given fresh chemicals and a clean machine, is standardized. 
Colour Printing requires colour corrections on a per-emulsion basis. Most 
1-hour labs can't be bothered to print correctly.

-Adam


Glen Tortorella wrote:
> I forgot to ask: is all C-41 processing the same?  I ask because on  
> my C-41 B&W I had processed at Wal-Mart, some of the whites have a  
> bit of a purplish tone.  My instinct tells me that this is a result  
> of inadequate light in these particular photos...or is C-41 for B&W  
> at Wal-Mart just a bad idea?
> 
> Thanks,
> Glen
> 
> On Oct 3, 2007, at 11:10 AM, Adam Maas wrote:
> 
>> Try each, settle on whichever produces the better results for you  
>> (I'd forgotten the N80 was 1/2 stops only). The flash system in the  
>> N80 is essentially identical to the F100 (as is the metering) apart  
>> from the F100's selectable exposure stop increments.
>>
>> -Adam
>>
>>
>> Glen Tortorella wrote:
>>> Thank you, Adam, for your detailed commentary.  Also, I thank
>>> everyone else who has responded--even the fellow who said I should
>>> have bought a Pentax (Dave, I think) :-)
>>>
>>> Adam: I tried dialing-in the -0.7 FEC value you suggest.  It seems
>>> the N80 will take only 1/2 increments (-0.5, -1.0, etc.).  I do not
>>> see any other way to set it.  Is there something I am missing?  Also,
>>> if I am correct about this, would -0.5 be sufficient, or would I be
>>> wasting my time?...or is this just another reason to look into an
>>> F100 (as you have suggested)?
>>>
>>> Glen
>>>
>>> On Oct 3, 2007, at 9:47 AM, Adam Maas wrote:
>>>
>>>> Glen Tortorella wrote:
>>>>> Hi all,
>>>>>
>>>>> Since I have a new, more "advanced" body, the N80, I tried taking
>>>>> some shots I would have avoided in the past.  The results were
>>>>> awful--
>>>>> not one good shot on the entire role, a miserable 0-for-24 (Kodak
>>>>> Gold 200).
>>>>>
>>>>> In the past, I would avoid two types of shots: 1) indoor shots  
>>>>> and 2)
>>>>> outdoor "high sun" shots in the fair weather months (i.e. during  
>>>>> the
>>>>> hours of about 10:00-4:00).  In doing so, I have assured myself
>>>>> decent, but not necessarily perfect, results.  Since the N80 has a
>>>>> better metering system (10-segment) and a pop-up flash that is
>>>>> supposed to be pretty good, I figured: "let me see what it can do."
>>>>> As I have said, the results were dreadful.  Here are the main  
>>>>> issues.
>>>>>
>>>>> 1) Every indoor flash shot showed at least moderate spotlight/wash-
>>>>> out effect of the subject (people).
>>>> Dial in -0.7 stops of Flash exposure compensation when shooting
>>>> people with Nikon flashes (including the popup). Leave this
>>>> permanently dialed in.
>>>>
>>>>> 2) On the outdoor "high sun" shots, the camera turned a seemingly
>>>>> minor shadows (through the viewfinder) on the subject's face into a
>>>>> black blobs that covered almost all of the subject's face.
>>>> Add flash, leave the -0.7 stops of FEC dialed in.
>>>>
>>>>> 3) When taking indoor shots with the flash, I would meter (10-
>>>>> segment) something like 1/30 or 1/45 or perhaps 1/60 at, say, f2.
>>>>> With the flash powered up, I do not think it ever metered
>>>>> differently.  For example, 1/30 at f/2 was still 1/30 at f/2  
>>>>> with the
>>>>> flash enabled.  Is this correct, or is there something wrong  
>>>>> with my
>>>>> camera?
>>>> That is correct, the N80 will attempt to balance the exposure if it
>>>> can get the shutter between 1/125 and 1/30 or so, with a slight
>>>> bias towards the flash illumination (hence the FEC I recommend). If
>>>> you want a pure flash exposure, shoot in manual.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>> 4) The one decent shot in the whole role--an indoor shot using only
>>>>> available light...go figure?--was spoiled by some sort of small  
>>>>> speck
>>>>> on the subject's face.  I usually keep my filter free of dust, etc.
>>>>> Could this speck have appeared as a result of the cheap  
>>>>> processing I
>>>>> used (Wal-Mart C-41)?
>>>> Probably. Check your negs.
>>>>
>>>>> I know that using a fill flash may have alleviated the problem
>>>>> expressed in issue number 2, but, since I have had my subjects  
>>>>> turn a
>>>>> bit ghastly by using the flash, I am hesitant to use it indoors or
>>>>> outdoors.  I would appreciate any advice or commentary (or even pep
>>>>> talk), as I am pretty down about this.  What good is a more
>>>>> "advanced" camera if I cannot even come remotely close to
>>>>> satisfactory results on the more difficult shots (i.e. indoor,  
>>>>> "high
>>>>> sun," etc.)?
>>>>>
>>>>> Thanks,
>>>>> Glen
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>> Fill flash is your friend, but remember direct flash always looks a
>>>> bit ghastly. A (cheap) SB-24 and an SC-17 or SC-28 cord will get
>>>> the flash off-camera with full TTL, and is a much better option.
>>>>
>>>> -Adam
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> -- 
>>>> PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List
>>>> [email protected]
>>>> http://pdml.net/mailman/listinfo/pdml_pdml.net
>>>> to UNSUBSCRIBE from the PDML, please visit the link directly above
>>>> and follow the directions.
>>>
>>
>>
>> -- 
>> PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List
>> [email protected]
>> http://pdml.net/mailman/listinfo/pdml_pdml.net
>> to UNSUBSCRIBE from the PDML, please visit the link directly above  
>> and follow the directions.
> 
> 



-- 
PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List
[email protected]
http://pdml.net/mailman/listinfo/pdml_pdml.net
to UNSUBSCRIBE from the PDML, please visit the link directly above and follow 
the directions.

Reply via email to