Quote:
Originally Posted by funkydog
Polypan F, 100 ISO, 15ml Ilford DDX + 650ml water, 30 mins stand development at 30 deg C. 1800DPI scan. The negs are a little thin for darkroom printing but scan well.
ppf_ddx on Flickr
The next two photos show the drastic light fall off for anything in shade
ppf_ddx2 on Flickr
ppf_ddx3 on Flickr
while the bright stuff holds together pretty good.
ppf_ddx4 on Flickr
Maybe it's the way I photoshop the pics. Here's a raw scan for anyone who wants to try.
polypanf_rawscan on Flickr
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Hi,
Sorry to dig this old post out again.
I have been doing the same approach as you do (scanning the negative in raw and then converting into B&W later in Photoshop), but I am encountering problem with tuning the contrast.
I used to put a straight away invert layer, into a level adjustment layer for tuning the level of each RBG channel (I just drag the sliders to the ends of the histograms), and finally a black & white layer. In this way I usually have a greyish sort of layer over the photo.
I recently try a different method: invert layer > level adjustment layer to drag sliders of each channel > do a calculation combining the red and blue channel with soft light mixing in order to convert to a new black & white channel. In this way I usually have a high-key image.
Apology in advance if I am a bit off topic, I know I should be discussing the film here, not the Photoshop techniques. As you posted the raw scan, so I had a play around with it. It's interesting to see either of my way can't get the result of the final photo you got (which I like the taste of it). How do you get the contrast just right? Do you mind to share with us your workflow of processing the raw scans into B&W photos and some techniques used in Photoshop?
Jon