


Ujjwal - those panos rock![]()
I scanned a roll of FP4 yesterday but the results are awful, I tried to "fix" the major lack of contrast in these frames by playing with levels but I'd really like to avoid this (I want to see film characteristics, not make them myself). I'm trying to work out if the problem is the light, the orange filter, the metering,grad placement, development or the scanning.
1. A product of PhotoShop buggery.
3. I gave up the will to live so started tweaking the gamma and other such things, no separate masks for foreground or sky or anything like that.
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What camera were you using? I was going to say that the last one looks like frame numbers from backing paper but then the numbers are never lined up like that on roll film.
Whatever it is it is very strange. I've had a few problems with Peak in the past but not scratches to the extent you seem to have experienced. Could it be a problem with the camera? Some sharp edges or something? Could it be your handling when scanning?
Been a while, here's a few from the C35-EF3 again...
Rollei Retro 100, ID-11, blah blah.
The numbers are correct 6x6 frame numbers, that would make the format 6x7/6x8 ??
Rollei IR 400 is IR film not retro 80, but it still looks like a leak after the film was exposed since its the arse end of the film.
I wouldn't have thought a few of seconds exposure to daylight of a wound roll of 120 would do that though, it would have to be 360 degrees of light....:shrug:
The numbers are correct 6x6 frame numbers, that would make the format 6x7/6x8 ??
Rollei IR 400 is IR film not retro 80, but it still looks like a leak after the film was exposed since its the arse end of the film.
I wouldn't have thought a few of seconds exposure to daylight of a wound roll of 120 would do that though, it would have to be 360 degrees of light....:shrug:
You need to get a grad on that, its a proper little sky blower that c35 Arthur.
Still, its better than a perfect sky and a load of black in the foreground..![]()
I know that this film is special in that it is also an infrared capable film, perhaps that makes it more sensitive, it's a very thin film. After putting the exposed film in my bag I opened up the bag and had direct sun shining on the roll briefly, would that explain it? These problems all showed up in the 5X4 prints I had done at the same time (apart from scratches which you can't see at that size). None of these shots were long exposures and I've never had problems like this with the other rolls I put through the camera after this one.
You've just reminded me why I never changed 120 film in daylight if I could help it.
I carried a changing-bag to reload film backs for the Hasselblad and the Pentax 6x7 so as to avoid what's happened to you.
Studio work is less of a problem as there's less bright light kicking around...
After the films were rewound and put back in their foil wrappers, I then put them in a tupperware box that I'd covered in gaffer-tape to make totally light-proof.
Very tricky in the summer as sweaty hands and film emulsion are not a good mix - I used thin white cotton gloves to handle everything...
Blimey - the things you forget!!!
A few from this weekend with the Mamiya RZ67 shot on colour neg film
Lovely images and nice bike, fixed? I need to get some images of my peugeot as its being neglected at the moment as I am having to drive to work![]()
Some shots from my newly acquired Canon AE-1 Program and the 50mm 1.8. Tesco Dev and CD, some cloning of marks and resize only![]()
and afew more, i hope double posting isn't too much of a faux pas!