What brand & speed of 35mm slide film to use??
#1
Posted 27 December 2006 - 10:24 AM
#2
Posted 27 December 2006 - 10:29 AM
http://www.fujifilmu...oductVelvia.jsp
I used it a few times before completely switching to digital, and its quality is comparable to the Velvia 50, with the added bonus of being ISO 100. But it's hard to find and the price is going up too these digital days...
Luiz
P.S.: I moved the topic to the Film area...
Luiz Rocha - www.luizrocha.com
Nikon D800, Aquatica AD800, Ikelite strobes.
#3
Posted 27 December 2006 - 06:13 PM
Back in the day - I used Fuji 50 color slide film in my Nikonos III. Have there been any breakthroughs in film technology in the last 10 years that would drive me to switch??
Depends if you are shooting with the slide as your final product (say for projection) or if you're wanting to have a piece of film that you can scan to create a digital file for digital projection, display on screen, printing etc.
If the latter is your goal, you might want to consider Fuji's Astia 100. It is far lower contrast than velvia or provia, and the colour reproduction is very accurate, and it scans very nicely on consumer scanners which aren't known for their abilty to handle high contrast. Astia's blue reproduction is particularly nice, not the magenta-blue of the other fuji films. Its very nice for natural light/clear water/big blue images.
So you can shoot Astia, make a nice scan with lots of information and add your contrast and saturation enhancements in Photoshop. It's a lot like shooting RAW digital files and adding your preffered characteristics to images as required.
darren
Canon EOS5Dmkii + EOS7D + Aquatica | Megadome | Minidome100 | AQUAVIEW 45 | Inon Z240 | Inon LE550w
#4
Posted 27 December 2006 - 09:45 PM
Velvia 100 is ok, but i prefer Provia 100
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#5
Posted 28 December 2006 - 06:05 AM
I was told Fuji is going to reproduce NEW type of Velvia 50......really hope they do. I use mixture of Velvia, Provia & Kodak ES.
Sam
and Nauticam D-7000 with Insect-eye lens.
#6
Posted 28 December 2006 - 07:21 AM
Hi,
I was told Fuji is going to reproduce NEW type of Velvia 50......really hope they do.
Sam
I also understand this is the case.
Canon EOS5Dmkii + EOS7D + Aquatica | Megadome | Minidome100 | AQUAVIEW 45 | Inon Z240 | Inon LE550w
#7
Posted 07 January 2007 - 11:42 PM
The newer trend 90's to recent was Velvia 50 for macro work as well as w/a. Now thats thats gone for most ( still have a bunch in fridge) the Velvia 100 seems the best bet. Film has been kicked down here a bit but still when it works well nothing is better than film for those super snappy shots. Glad to see others using it. Remember they made a trillion or so of film cameras for about 100+ years and those new dig ones are only a few years old so film will be around awhile more I feel.
Film is less forgiving and is more costly to work with but hey quality sometimes costs more. Mark
2 Aquatica f/3 housings
Nikon film f/5's and f/3's cameras
Way to many strobes to list
All that Nikonos junk
and now a subal d300 setup
Still a film divasourus with a baby toe in digital world
#8
Posted 08 January 2007 - 12:17 AM
As one who has shot film underwater for over 25 years and still does with 5 working systems-the statement back in the day is really about kodacrome 64-now that was hot back in the day. Mark
Kodachrome was great u/w. Astia is the closest thing to kodachrome as far as blue repro goes.
Canon EOS5Dmkii + EOS7D + Aquatica | Megadome | Minidome100 | AQUAVIEW 45 | Inon Z240 | Inon LE550w
#9
Posted 08 January 2007 - 04:12 PM
Kodachrome was great u/w. Astia is the closest thing to kodachrome as far as blue repro goes.
I prefer Asita on land. I use it in the 120 format and found it is the best for scanning. When I start shooting underwater, I will continue to shoot Astia due to the extra exposure latitude.
Also, there are two types of Velvia 100. The new Velvia 100 and the older Velvia 100 F. I never liked the 100 F, not near as nice as the Velvia 50. stay away from the 100 F
#10
Posted 02 April 2007 - 07:00 AM
Depends if you are shooting with the slide as your final product (say for projection) or if you're wanting to have a piece of film that you can scan to create a digital file for digital projection, display on screen, printing etc.
If the latter is your goal, you might want to consider Fuji's Astia 100. It is far lower contrast than velvia or provia, and the colour reproduction is very accurate, and it scans very nicely on consumer scanners which aren't known for their abilty to handle high contrast. Astia's blue reproduction is particularly nice, not the magenta-blue of the other fuji films. Its very nice for natural light/clear water/big blue images.
So you can shoot Astia, make a nice scan with lots of information and add your contrast and saturation enhancements in Photoshop. It's a lot like shooting RAW digital files and adding your preffered characteristics to images as required.
darren
Is there an Astia 100 and Astia 100F? If so, is there any difference between them?
How do print enlargements turn out (8x10, 11x16) using these films for u/w photos?
#11
Posted 05 April 2007 - 06:42 PM
As for enlargements i have made prints from wallets to 24x36 prints off astia slides it just comes down to the scan that was done and how well its prepared before printing, if its a good slide it should be pretty easy but if its not it could be a major challenge and require alot of photoshop work to get it to print. I personally shoot it right in camera so that my post is minimal if at all, and save the voodoo, and tricks to save a shot that i need.
Overall this is a pretty good film i would use it or provia (color balance is alittle more blue which is good underwater when properly exposed) as a slide film to start with underwater.
FWIW
Tooth
Edited by Scubatooth, 05 April 2007 - 06:46 PM.
#12
Posted 16 May 2007 - 09:28 AM
Something else to think about is AGFA Scalla for black and white. As far as I know it is the only B&W 35mm slide film on the market. For a while there was a problem with getting it processed, but I found a place that is still processing it.
YMMV
fisheyeview
#13
Posted 17 March 2009 - 02:56 PM
#14
Posted 11 March 2010 - 03:38 AM
#15
Posted 03 April 2013 - 10:17 PM
Any places in Australia still selling Velvia 50 and 100??
http://www.flickr.co...s/22898788@N04/
#16
Posted 05 April 2013 - 09:19 AM
Before I went over to shooting a digital camera, I changed to shooting colour negative film that scanned very nicely. Of course, it was a temporary phase as digital cameras quickly improved.
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