that's what I'm seeing....drift to sour yellow....but is that bad scanning like I mentioned......I never liked the palette of Kodak Gold 200. For landscape and things I use Ektar 100, for people Portra. Life is too short for yellow.
I never liked the palette of Kodak Gold 200. For landscape and things I use Ektar 100, for people Portra. Life is too short for yellow, which seems the dominant color for Gold 200.
Still have expired Provia, Astia and E100 in the freezer....one thing I'll say--the current US prices for 120 Gold 200, is cheaper than most B&W film. A five pack for $32 (B&H) = $6.40 a roll. $0.40 more than Arista or Kentmere. So anyone complaining about the cost of color film needs to shoot 120.
I don't shoot a lot of color and usually prefer Provia (if I can get it) or E100. I do like gold more than the portras (though I do shoot portra 800 when in dark and colorful places.) I prefer the Fuji C41 colors and still have a bunch of Pro400H, but there is very little more that I can get, so I do shoot Gold at times. (I don't really shoot 35mm anymore, so my choices are 120 and sheet film.)
Hi Lachlan. Forgive me for being postentially annoying, but what are you referring to by "it" - Portra 800 or Gold 200? I seem to be easily confused by pronoun and indirect references today.If you're ok with it having about the granularity of Portra 800, then it's good stuff, if you are able to scan/ darkroom print it competently.
It really ain't Portra on the colour rendering front, just so you're aware. It's pretty warm overall, and the proclamations about mud are largely from people trying to force the curve behaviour off in directions it isn't meant to go. It's useful precisely because isn't Portra, not a cheaper substitute.
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