I've been developing color film for only a short while and I'm having some difficulty getting colors that look reasonable to me. I have mild color blindness so that could be part of it of course, but it could be other issues as well. My scans are usually pretty far off, and require significant adjustments.
The videos of this product make it look pretty straightforward to get the color very close, and then adjust to taste.
Does anyone have experiences to share?
Thanks,
Jeff
Jeff,
I went to the Camera World camera fair in London yesterday - not for kit, but to meet a good friend and former colleague who retired earlier this year and has developed a keen interest in photography. While there, I bumped into a very nice and very informative chap who is a representative for Datacolor (one of the exhibitors). I use their previous iteration of the Spyder (4) to calibrate my Mac and it does a VERY good job. However, I'm considering buying a printer and, if I'm honest, I can't understand how anyone can work without a piece of kit that gets the screen and printer in sync. The link below is to the latest kit they produce and it looks pretty simple to use from the demo I had. It's not cheap, though....
James and Satish produce some lovely photos and I don't have any problem at all with colours on my photos not being 100% true-to-life, so long as how they end up is how I decided. I have enough geekery inside me to
want need the base point from which I start my processing to be "neutral" and ensure that whatever I print (or have printed) to be as exact a copy of what I put on screen as can be achieved. My logic goes that I'm the photographer, I spend good money on my kit and film. My interpretation of my photos is, therefore, what matters to me and it's a total waste of time, effort and money to have the end result not be what I'm trying to achieve because cheapo-snaps (or I) can't be arsed to calibrate the printer and ensure that the end result is as planned.
That might come across as a bit severe and obsessional but, although I'm not technologically "gifted", I am at a point where I care about the end result and loathe that feeling when I pick up prints which are a let-down because there's some sort of unexpected and unwanted colour cast. I even had this with some black and whites I had printed a couple of years ago which had a slight (but noticeable) green tinge to them. The lab tech couldn't see it (in their icky fluorescent strip-lit shop) but I had some other prints with me which I knew to be "right" and in daylight, they had to concede the prints they'd done weren't just shades of grey.
If you're looking for something that will produce a baseline from which to print faithfully - or to go down the creative route, this would be my starting point but the x-ryte is probably just as good - though I've never used it.
http://spyder.datacolor.com/