They actuallky manufacutre films for Lomography. It's a ISO 400 film they are working on a ISO 200 color film since 2023 which should be less grainy (at least the test shoots I've seen).
I appreciate you doing this video, but I think you need to be sure to do some research first. It's not that it's a cinematic film, it IS a cinema film, as in it's movie film. Wolfen makes movie film, that's what they do, but they made this available for photography too. Nice video though, hope you get more subs soon. We deed more people making vids about alternative films.
Ah I see, thanks for your input, I did some minor research but was not really able to find too much about this film now it all makes sense now, and why it has that unique look, I really appreciate the support and the comment. Thank you!
It looks a bit under exposed in some ways. Not much shadow detail. Would be good to see a shot of a Macbeth card in it. I wonder what it would look like processed in ECN2. I know the Silbesaltz guys recommend overexposing by a stop the Vision 3 stuff they spool into 35mm cassettes. I think C41 gives a more punchy neg but at the cost of losing some colour fidelity. That Vision 3 stuff has an amazing dynamic range, esp when you get a really good movie grade 4k or 14k double pass scan done by Silbesaltz.
I appreciate to looking into film a bit and I also respect your opinion, but like mentioned by some comments before, do your research, as some things you say are not doing justice to that legacy company who actually invented the first modern color film and, by the way, also produces the emulsions for some Lomo stock. So, here is the link, read through it, think about it and eventually come up with a new video. I like how you did this video in general. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ORWO Cheers & happy shooting
I LOVE the look of this film 👍 I alwats hoped for a color version of Kodak Tri-x and this seems to be that film. I just ordered 50 rolls. 🌞🙏
50 is quite the commitment! Though, I kinda understand, this look is *a vibe*
Don't know if this has been pointed out, but 2:58 I think the green is just how the fluorescent lights show up in this sort of color film
The company is called ORWO and has a long history in analogue film production. Wolfen is just a town area of Bitterfeld-Wolfen
Cool, I will need to check out if they have other films. I did some research and did not find this info but great to know!
im just curious what makes a photographer a "professional"?
Projessional just means they get paid to take photos.
Super grainy, I agree this is probably something more niche like lomo metropolis
They actuallky manufacutre films for Lomography. It's a ISO 400 film they are working on a ISO 200 color film since 2023 which should be less grainy (at least the test shoots I've seen).
boy you weren't kidding about it being grainy.
I appreciate you doing this video, but I think you need to be sure to do some research first. It's not that it's a cinematic film, it IS a cinema film, as in it's movie film. Wolfen makes movie film, that's what they do, but they made this available for photography too. Nice video though, hope you get more subs soon. We deed more people making vids about alternative films.
Ah I see, thanks for your input, I did some minor research but was not really able to find too much about this film now it all makes sense now, and why it has that unique look, I really appreciate the support and the comment. Thank you!
It looks a bit under exposed in some ways. Not much shadow detail. Would be good to see a shot of a Macbeth card in it. I wonder what it would look like processed in ECN2. I know the Silbesaltz guys recommend overexposing by a stop the Vision 3 stuff they spool into 35mm cassettes. I think C41 gives a more punchy neg but at the cost of losing some colour fidelity. That Vision 3 stuff has an amazing dynamic range, esp when you get a really good movie grade 4k or 14k double pass scan done by Silbesaltz.
I appreciate to looking into film a bit and I also respect your opinion, but like mentioned by some comments before, do your research, as some things you say are not doing justice to that legacy company who actually invented the first modern color film and, by the way, also produces the emulsions for some Lomo stock.
So, here is the link, read through it, think about it and eventually come up with a new video. I like how you did this video in general.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ORWO
Cheers & happy shooting
Thank you for feedback