Ultimate mix up!

Started with Kodak Ektachrome Tungsten 320 - Redscaled it - Shot photos at 100 iso - Cross processed film in C41 - Scanned them as slides = Delftware Blue!

Second half of the album are the same pics, but scanned as negatives. In my opinion the Kodak Ektachrome 320T film makes for fun experiments AND killer redscales!

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www.lomography.tw/magazine/tipster/2013/05/20/tutorial-roll…

攝影師:
sandravo
上載:
2013-07-30
標籤:
blauw delft delfts delftware digibase redscale slide tungsten xpro
相機:
Canon EOS 50
菲林:
Kodak Ektachrome EPJ 320T
城市:
Beveren
國家/地區:
Belgium
Year:
2013
Time:
dusk
相簿:
Delftware Blue

8 個留言

  1. mafiosa
    mafiosa ·

    cool!

  2. sandravo
    sandravo ·

    @mafiosa Thanks! I think so too! Now that I know how this turned out I will select my subjects more carefully next time.

  3. sobetion
    sobetion ·

    Great!!

  4. aguillem
    aguillem ·

    this one is awesome!

  5. sandravo
    sandravo ·

    Thanks @aguillem! This is my favorite too! Secretly I hope this films turns equally blue but with positive images when I redscale and then develop in E6. That would be awesome!

  6. aguillem
    aguillem ·

    I'm afraid I really don't think so... blue is the complementary color of orange-red, so if the slide is scanned as negative you should have a "normal" redscale. However the redscale tones may be different when developed in E06...?
    The experiment would cut short!

  7. sandravo
    sandravo ·

    @aguillem - I have no idea, just hope ;-) It is a very odd film (keep in mind it is tungsten). Most slides films when cross processed turn out colored entirely, not just the image but also the base layer. Like a negative turns brown entirely. But not this one. These blue print pictures are exactly the way the film looks: transparent with blue. Very odd. But like you say: best way to find out is to try! I am very curious :-)

  8. grazie
    grazie ·

    cool!

More photos by sandravo