Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/07/11
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Mike >>I have been using the new Kodak Portra 800 to good effect over the last few weeks. Holds a highlight in bright sun better than the Fuji 800 and scans a treat on a Coolscan III.<< I've had had very good luck with 160 and 400 Portra films. The negs seem to scan remarkably well. I hardly ever have to adjust colors in the scanned images. I didn't know that 800 was available. Since I've been scanning (bought an LS-30 last fall) I've been shooting much more neg film. It's been quite a while since I've gone through a brick of E100. Part of the reason is cost. I can get neg film processed for $1.50 per roll at a very good lab with 1 hour turn around. I can hook my laptop up to my Sony 36 inch Vega Trinitron TV and imitate a slide show with Vueprint software. It certainly doesn't have the same ambiance as a slide show, but it's more convenient than setting up the Ektagraphic. Convenience is important. Sometimes I'll look at a series of photographs a dozen or more times over a week's period. I like to get over my initial reaction which may over emphasize technical aspects which have little to do with the overall value of an image. It's interesting how my feelings regarding certain images change with time. Slides may never make it off the light board. Or I may project them once and store them away. Further, is it possible we'll see more "digital magazines" in the future? Right now there are lots of good reasons for using slide film. And it's probably a neccessity for stock photography.But photography is for me a hobby and shall remain that way. I made a good living at it years ago but I burned out and didn't touch a camera for 6 years. I don't want to go back there. I sell enough work (all digitally processed) to cover my expenses, and that's all. I like the Portra films, and I use them quite a bit. But recently I've been shooting Gold 200. I get it for under $2 a roll, and it's very good film. It, too, seems to scan well, though I find myself having to adjusting colors more often. For a while Kodak was offering rebates that made it less than $1 per roll. Though my heart is really in b/w I'm finding that I'm scanning color neg film and changing to greyscale for digital processing. I feel a bit handcuffed, though, when I get an image I really like because darkroom printing isn't an option. I've seen some very nice output from some of the new printers with archival b/w inks. Times certainly are changing. I still like working in my darkroom, though. I don't see it as "digital" OR "conventional". I like both, depending on the situation. I'd like to hear "if" and "how" other Leica users have incorporated digital processing, and if things (materials they use) have changed a little or a lot. Dave