And print on a paper that gives high saturation - think Kodak Endura.But if you want saturation buy a film that normally provides saturated color.
Film stock and exposure comparison - Fuji 400H, Portra 160, Portra 400 & Portra 800 http://canadianfilmlab.com/2014/04/24/film-stock-and-exposure-comparisons-kodak-portra-and-fuji/
It's hard to go wrong with modern film stock.
Same here - I guess it's more interesting for those who scan their colour negatives (I do) - I can tell my that my -mediocre- V600 scanning unit gives similar results with overexposed colour film.... I would like to see the results with darkroom prints ...
As forgiving as B&W? I heard you should overexpose it by 1 stop for better saturation? Thanks
Amateur color neg films were designed for a lot of "latitude" (sloppiness, lack of metering). Higher performing films, not so
Virtually all color film performs best when exposed as indicated by the manufacturer. Most color neg film won't bite you if you overexpose it by one or two stops.
I used c-41 for years. In AE. From P&S to EOS 3. I have no idea who came with with one stop something idea. They must have really crappy camera or something else is not OK. Like developer they used or how they or else developed it.
I also shoot C-41, ECN2, E6 and BW by S16. I guess, it is more on the shooter, not on the film side.
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