I really like how you adapt your color grading to the film used at the same moment, thats brilliant. Also those images are beautiful !
@JCrofts
2 жыл бұрын
Thanks you!
@spectrazone
2 жыл бұрын
Wow, fabulous video! Got absolutely giddy when you brought out the infrared film and the foliage turned green. Also, that shot at the very end of the composite slowly falling out of register as it zooms in looks gorgeous, really creative use of the image and something I hadn't considered.
@JCrofts
2 жыл бұрын
I want to get more creative with videos going forward and I thought this was a good start! I set up a "3D" scene in aftereffects to create the fly-through effect and like you say it is a really cool effect. Thank you so much for your comment :)
@donaldlampert331
2 жыл бұрын
I’ve heard of this, but you made it really clear….. how cool…. Must try it sometime! Thanks!
@kyuseok98
Жыл бұрын
I honestly believed that there is a Peter Gabriel museum! Best trichrome explanation and sample shots video I've ever seen :)
@JCrofts
Жыл бұрын
Thank you for your kind comment! 😊
@donaldlampert331
2 жыл бұрын
Nice Ilford article! So, just wondering….. couldn’t you just layer the actual negatives, and project a light through them…… on an enlarger say?! probably not much control of the color balance, but how did they do it before digital Photoshop? Wasn’t all this, kind of the process of Kodachrome film processing where the negative went thru RGB dye baths, where the parts of the negative picked up the appropriate dye and/dyes to produce the wanted color?!
@gregfaris6959
2 жыл бұрын
You can definitely do this all analog in the darkroom, but your separation elements must remain separate until the final assembly. You could make color internegatives (which would be C-M-Y) and print them as a pack or one by one, and there are ways to control the registration (by using a tight-fitting cover to protect the paper while lining up each image, with a positive image of the shot on it to register to. If you have a color enlarger head, you can do the same thing with the original; negatives, just dialing in the CYM values for each negative. Or you can use the color imbibtion or "dye transfer" process, where B&W positives are soaked with dyes and transfered onto non light-sensitive paper one by one, using pin registration. The finest exhibition and museum prints of color artists like Ernst Haas were made this way, but mind you his originals were kodachrome transparencies, so there were no rainbow effects from things moving around between exposures. Technicolor film prints were also made this way, right up to the 1970s, with many viewers not knowing they were looking at dye-transfer prints - a technology many associate with "Wizar of Oz" type colors, but which was capable of all the subdued complexity of films like "The Godfather", though once again we are talking about a single-strip acquisition. In the cases (pre-Eastmancolor) where acquisition used separate RGB negatives, there would be three separate camera bodies to shoot every separation frame at exactly the same time. Such cameras can be found today, in various formats: www.vintagephoto.tv/scouts2.shtml
@legomasterj
Жыл бұрын
Did you do psuedo-aerochrome video near the end, or were the bushes really red?
@JCrofts
Жыл бұрын
The faux infrared look was achieved by using the LUT by Mathieu Stern. You can see later on in the video that the bushes are in fact green. It was just a stylistic choice I made as I was shooting IR B&W film.
@gavinjenkins899
5 ай бұрын
I like trichromes, but HP5 makes no sense. You're on a tripod... use Delta 100 or something. Or if you like classic grain still, then kentmere 100 or FP4
@oneeyedphotographer
Жыл бұрын
That background noise is hugely distracting. Better, you should explain what you're doing.
@UpcomingJedi
5 ай бұрын
Wtf does sledgehammer have to do with the video? Why cant anyone get it right and advertise RELEVANT merchandise? Its like walking into a car dealer and someone comes up to you selling oven cleaner and sprays your face with it to show you how effective it is! FFS! At least make it PHOTOGRAPHY related! Sturdy tripods come to mind vs those flimsy aluminium and plastic ones sold at department stores.
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