Yes, Polopan tends to show cyan after about 3 min exposures that I have tried. I tend to remove cyan in photoshop and results are quite good. Use of Polaroid back is good since one can see instant results and can changes the exposure conditions as needed at the spot. Thanks, Achal
-----Original Message----- From: pinhole-discussion-admin@p at ??????? [mailto:pinhole-discussion-admin@p at ???????] On Behalf Of Patrick Barrett Sent: Saturday, May 25, 2002 9:26 AM To: pinhole-discussion@p at ??????? Subject: Re: [pinhole-discussion] using polaroid 545 back That's for sure. The shift can be so drastic that the image is essentially a grayscale in cyan (cyan-scale?) Good luck. --Patrick >From: CLinT-BOb <send2...@pacbell.net> >Reply-To: pinhole-discussion@p at ??????? >To: pinhole-discussion@p at ??????? >Subject: [pinhole-discussion] using polaroid 545 back >Date: Fri, 24 May 2002 17:22:07 -0700 > >Can someone share their experience using instant film? >>From what Ive seen, reciprocity can shift pinhole >polaroid photos towards cyan ( polaroid also says this). >I am using a leonardo 4x5 and 545 holder. > >Clint > > >_______________________________________________ >Post to the list as PLAIN TEXT only - no HTML >Pinhole-Discussion mailing list >Pinhole-Discussion@p at ??????? >unsubscribe or change your account at >http://www.???????/discussion/ _________________________________________________________________ Chat with friends online, try MSN Messenger: http://messenger.msn.com _______________________________________________ Post to the list as PLAIN TEXT only - no HTML Pinhole-Discussion mailing list Pinhole-Discussion@p at ??????? unsubscribe or change your account at http://www.???????/discussion/