Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/12/14
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Isaac, I suggest you try Kodak's E100SW before you state a slide film cannot have both accurate and saturated color.... BETTER YET, try the new Agfa RSX II films. You may be surprised. IMHO, if K64 was that good, why was Kodak able to come out with an Ektachrome that blows it away....or why is it that so few pros use it? Look through the magazines and you may be surprised to find that K25 and K64 have died, its just that no one told Kodak, or apparently some LUG members. Peter K - -----Original Message----- From: Isaac H Crawford [mailto:eyes1@mindspring.com] Sent: Friday, December 11, 1998 8:45 PM To: leica-users@mejac.palo-alto.ca.us Subject: Re: [Leica] I for one am glad Kodachrome is dead or dying. , > >Until you have tried some of the new E-6 films don't knock 'em. I stopped using E-6 films recently...The first time I tried K64, I was hooked, K25 is better, but I can't use it all the time... The benefit to these newer >films over Kodachrome it that they are more accurate in color rendition, but >most offer better color saturation. Huh? I've heard this many times, and it has never made sense...a film is either accurate OR more saturated...not both. If a film is MORE anything, it is no longer accurate. To me, Kodachrome is MUCH more accurate than any E-6 film I've ever used...maybe not over every plot on a Macbeth color chart, but the overall effect is, IMO, much more true to life. Example, Kodachrome can not reproduce >purple well, it comes out as blue. And all of the blues I've ever seen with Velvia in particular were leaning towards purple... Too much magenta in the blues (that's how it gets that "electric" look), at least in comparison to K64... All the new E-6 films can reproduce >purple and other colors much more accurate comparable and often better grain >than K25 or K64. > Remember, color reproduction and grain are not everything...contrast and microcontrast play a big part in how an image looks...I also find that color nuance is better appreciated with Kodachrome than with any E-6 film. There's a guy at work who kept giving me a hard time about shooting "that old film". He asked me, why would I shoot that stuff when Velvia is finer grained and has more punch? My answer...because nothing else looks like Kodachrome... Isaac >Peter K >(Happy E-6 user)