Although I'm not personally well experienced in the process,
several of my colleagues have worked with it. As the name would
suggest, you process the film you use in the wrong process.
You can run E-6 (slide) film through C-41 and get a negative.
Alternatively, you can process C-41 (color neg) film through E-6
process and get a transparency. Either way, you'll get a strange
color shift that seems to be a recent popular trend.
Peter Yamasaki
Peter Yamasaki Photography
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http://members.aol.com/yamasaki
New England School of Photography
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In article <19990125225041...@ng-cb1.aol.com>, nes...@aol.commo
wrote:
>You can run E-6 (slide) film through C-41 and get a negative.
>Alternatively, you can process C-41 (color neg) film through E-6
>process and get a transparency. Either way, you'll get a strange
>color shift that seems to be a recent popular trend.
Not so recent... I saw a lot (actually too much of it) mindlessly
cross-processed fashion shots (just for the sake of mindlessly using
another/different technique) back in the very early 90's (roughly 90/91).
Experimentation is fine. Cross-processing can be an effective fashion/people
technique if you use it w/ sensitivity: if you have the right/appropriate
vision and the right/appropriate subject matter (Jose Picayo seems to do well
w/ the technique). But like other "gimmicky techniques" - or techniques that
get turned into gimmicks -(lightpainting, infrared, blacklight photography,
grainy photo-impressionism, Polaroid transfer, etc.) many photographers
(fashion, people, still life, otherwise) tend to abuse it w/ great success (in
misusing this technique without thought) rather than use it w/ great success.
That's my take on it... But then again the only blue faces that I've ever liked
were in Leibovitz's 1979 photo of the Blues Brothers - but that wasn't crossed
processed. Just color me (abbey (road)) normal :-).
"LEWISVISION" - "Fine art and stock photography (conceptual surrealistic people
and still life photography, from the real to the surreal and beyond!)
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Regards,
John S. Douglas http://www.spectrumphoto.com
Darkroom formulas and facts. F.A.Q.'s Photo & computer links.
Professional portrait, bridal, stock and commercial photography.
WORLD FIELD PHOTOGRAPHERS ASSOCIATION
Regards,
John S. Douglas http://www.spectrumphoto.com
Darkroom formulas and facts. F.A.Q.'s Photo & computer links.
Professional portrait, bridal, stock and commercial photography.
WORLD FIELD PHOTOGRAPHERS ASSOCIATION
color infared?
Try Agfa HDC100, exposed between EI32 and EI80.
Process in E-6 pushed 2 steps.
Nice blues and skintones...:)
-Jan
FYI
For people in UK, Practical Photography did a review of the effect of
cross processing on studio portraits in July 98 p72-77. Kodak Elite
II rated at 50 and processed normally was the recommendation (for
back issues practical....@ecm.emap.com). When I tried Elite
II the results came back with a green cast on skin tones. I'll try
with FLD correction next time.
--
*** Make every day as if it were your last ***
'Cos one day you'll be right
Regards and happy shooting
Peter (DPS Design and Photography Services and Nick Knight
Appreciation Society)