Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2004/11/11
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Dick, I enjoy the first one but think it might need a bit of sharpening. Were your Supra prints oversaturated? I used this film myself recently on a very dim morning in Quebec and got what I thought was very fine grain for a ISO 400 film and very realistic color. Royal Supra 400 Professional, right? The light was so poor, I had to use 1/30th at f2 or f2.8. Very pleased with my results, given the light. Maybe it's the scans? I use the same work-flow, having no time to do anything else. My local lab uses a new Agfa machine which gives me files in the 3 - 5 MB range. These require very little PSE2 to post. Compare. MP .58, 35/f2 LHSA <http://gallery.leica-users.org/Quebec-LR3-Launch/LUG54?full=1> <http://gallery.leica-users.org/Quebec-LR3-Launch/LUG53?full=1> serious crop! :-) <http://gallery.leica-users.org/Quebec-LR3-Launch/LUG61?full=1> Best Regards, William P.S. Obviously you can infer from these what my "day job" might be..., and why I have so little time to take pictures either unless I'm travelling! :-) At 12:41 PM 11/11/2004 -0500, you wrote: >Now that the leaves are almost all down here and the world has gone mostly >gray and brown, I thought it would be fun to revisit the brilliant color >of just a few weeks ago. It was a great year for the >"leaf-peepers." Color was great. There were tour busses everywhere. > >All were taken with an M7 using Supra 400 and either a '70's version 28 >Elmarit or recent 35 Summicron ASPH, generally at f2.8 or f4.0 at >1/30. (It was really a dark day.) > >The scans were done commercially by my local photo shop at what is said to >be "400 dpi," though I believe that applies to the finished print. The >original images are 2996 x 2000 pixels (a 3.1MB JPG file) though >considerably shrunk for display on the web. > >Critiques welcome, of course. >============================================================================== >This is a tree I've driven by on my way to work for more than 20 years. I >think I actually caught it near peak this year. (That's a first - I've >been trying a long time.) Naturally, it happened on a rainy, foggy day. >;-) > >1. http://gallery.leica-users.org/PICKS/33_0031_lug