Can someone explain to me how this is/was possible?
I understand how different films had different color responses but how does film NOT pick up ambient color in subjects (the brown room mentioned or I suppose green reflected off of human subjects in an outdoor shot).
In the same vein:
James Russell:
'I love the fact that with film, that film was kind of stupid. Once you zoned in on a film stock, you knew how it would react regardless of ambient colour bounce, but with digital, it just seems like it's always hit and miss and like T says, the back end on digital is a monster.
I'm amazed I can shoot 10 subjects on white and have to adjust skin tones (usually a lot) to stop casting, red in shadows, yellow in transitional areas, etc. etc.
You see it in cinema and television also. Watch someone set at a desk and drop their head. The brown (red) of the desk just throws their faces red in the medium shadows) and then they go back up to the key and they go yellow, because the colorist probably working on lack of time and budget had to make a middle of the road decision.
Film doesn't do this as much (it can), but digital, is too sensitive.
In fact the prettiest way to work digital is to desat the whole image and paint back the saturation where you want it. Slightly, but it does give more of a film impression.'
TMARK:
'When I first started seriously working with digital (1ds) I would look at the files and wonder where the light pollution was coming from. I was looking for slow shutter and wide apertures and wondering if my modeling lights were polluting teh shadows, making them red(ish), yellow transitions in different frames, wondering if my packs were bad or flash tubes were bad. I spent money at Flash Clinic and shot in blacked out rooms and realized its just different than film. An easy fix in any case, but man I enjoy just picking up a yellow box from Duggal with my perfect yellow prints.'
James Russell:
'It's all a semi easy fix. What changed with digital to film was with film, when we sent contact sheets they had to be semi close, but not perfect, with transparencies they had to be spot on (remember buying cases of the same emulsion?), but with digital with the 1ds, I'd just use the jpegs out of camera for the galleries and nobody seemed to mind, though I still think the 1ds transitioned better from film to digital than most of the newer digital cameras.
I think digital like the 5d3 is just too everything. Too smooth, too color receptive, too . . . I dunno . . . digital.
Then again I like the mft cameras because they don't have a huge ambient color range, they do noise up after 800 iso and they look t me like film . . . but I shot epr transparency film that even at 64 asa was still grainy, so what d I know?'
http://www.luminous-landscape.com/forum/index.php?topic=79179.80