this is a great comparison. I shot a CineStill800T at night and the halation was way too distracting for my taste! I've been reading such good things about the 400D as a Portra alternative, and you've summarized the choices well. I'll stick with the Portra with no second guessing myself now. Thanks!
Glad to help! It's 400D is a great film, but that one element of the halation really is either something to embrace or that you'll be working to minimize.
Sorry, just saw this. Yes and no. I use the 85b when I can (usually on my Leica), but then don't if I'm using 500T in my point and shoot. You can edit it, but it's hard to be make it as clean.
this is a great comparison. I shot a CineStill800T at night and the halation was way too distracting for my taste! I've been reading such good things about the 400D as a Portra alternative, and you've summarized the choices well. I'll stick with the Portra with no second guessing myself now. Thanks!
Glad to help! It's 400D is a great film, but that one element of the halation really is either something to embrace or that you'll be working to minimize.
What camera and lens did you use for the images at 3:44
the Mamiya 6 MF with the 75mm f3.5 lens
I like 400D for the warmth but I hate the Halation sometimes.
It is definitely tricky. It's part of the reason I mostly use 500T. Get the benefits of the cinema line but avoid the halation.
oh good to know I'll have to try out 500T sometime. Do you use a lense filter to correct for the Tungsteen balance ?
Sorry, just saw this. Yes and no. I use the 85b when I can (usually on my Leica), but then don't if I'm using 500T in my point and shoot. You can edit it, but it's hard to be make it as clean.
Good to know thank you !@@JTobiason
Do you use DSLR to scan?
Yes. These were with the Canon 5D4 and the Valoi holders
Let’s compare these film colors. Here’s my photos of dead, colorless landscape.
Chill dude. Just having fun making photos.