Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2003/05/29
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Oliver: >In my current location, the turn-around time for professional b&w processing >is at least a week and involves two 60-mile round trips. I would appreciate >hearing from LUGers who currently print their b&w images primarily with >inkjet printers and papers, regarding their experience with chromogenic b&w >films (C-41 process). Are there nontrivial differences between XP2, TCN and >Portra? I really only have experience with XP2. I've shot one roll of TCN. Like others have mentioned, highlights are easy to blow with XP2. Here are some of my scans: http://canid.com/pics/boos_car.jpg http://canid.com/pics/jbm_col.jpg http://canid.com/pics/jbm_smile_2.jpg >How do the results of scanning these films differ from scanning >current generation silver based film? Do they look different? Do they have a >shorter scale? I much prefer Neopan in Xtol to XP2. What pushed me over the edge is that I can easily develop my own Xtol without a dedicated darkroom. I can't develop my own XP2 easily. When I started scanning at 4000 dpi, I started spending an inordinate amount of time retouching minute scratches on the negatives. I've had one "catastrophe" in several years of having a photo shop process my C41 film. Unfortunately, that involved the first rolls I had taken after the birth of my daughter. The negative of my wife and kidlet in the hospital bed <http://canid.com/pics/jbm_col.jpg> has several scratches. Grr. I lost a few frames, including my mom's holding newly born granddaughter in the hospital. Double grr. That's when I decided that I needed to do my own. If anybody was going to screw up my images, it was going to be me. Too stressful dealing with bumbling idiots. :) I'd urge you to look into doing your own development. Embedded dust and scratches on my negatives are relics of the past. Eric - -- To unsubscribe, see http://mejac.palo-alto.ca.us/leica-users/unsub.html