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Thread: "Brightening" of processed Ektachromes

  1. #1
    Robert A. Zeichner's Avatar
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    "Brightening" of processed Ektachromes

    Well, it's not often that I expose color film, but once in a great while I do an d over the years I've collected a handful of slightly underexposed EPN's. A fri end showed me a kit he bought from Edwal that was designed to brighten underexpo sed Kodachrome. He said they also made a kit for Ektachrome, but I have not bee n able to find info about that on Edwal's web site. I don't need more that abou t a half a stop of "brightening" in most instances. Any of you chrome experts o ut there have any ideas? Is there some secret supplier who sells this stuff? I s this one more environmental "worst nightmare" that has been banned? Your inpu t will be appreciated.

  2. #2

    "Brightening" of processed Ektachromes

    You could scan and modify electronically. It's easy to "undo" mistakes on the computer.

  3. #3

    "Brightening" of processed Ektachromes

    Another vote here for scanning and, possibly, re-outputting to film.The 'reducers' for colour slide are a bit hit-or-miss. They consist of bleaches for the three CMY dye layers individually, so the mix of chemicals is pretty critical. I know that one of the chemicals used is common household bleach; sodium perchlorate; for the magenta layer if memory serves. The other two aren't particularly exotic as I recall, but getting the mix right needs a lot of trial and error experimentation.

  4. #4

    Join Date
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    "Brightening" of processed Ektachromes

    Ed Degginger invented the Kodachrome formula that lightens underexposed chromes. He spent his career as a chemist and was always an avid 35mm photographer (lots of wildlife, though much general stock too). It is/was a two-bath system that 1)bleaches and 2)stops the bleaching. He sold it to Edwal and now sells stock out of Morristown, NJ. I found that it always made chromes magenta. It hit successive layers of dyes in the film, the magenta being the last. You had to stop the bleaching fast to save it, but that left a preponderance of magenta and increased contrast. Some of my attempts were quite good, others not so good. I heard that Edwal came out with a similar chemical for E-6 but I don't know this to be true. Digital manipulation would seem to be the way to go these days. But Edwal is part of Falcon Safety Products in NJ, and they probably have a Web site and do have an 800 number. They are helpful and responsive.

  5. #5

    "Brightening" of processed Ektachromes

    Modifying electronically an underexposed slide means that you have to use a very high performance scanner with a D-Max of 4.2 or more. Otherwise the image you will get is likely to be lacking d epth in the shadows. I also have a bunch of nice but underexposed slides (mostly Velvia). My scanner is not capable of reaching into the darkest areas to restitute enough details. I wondered if the best way to salvage them would no t be making duplicates on low contrast film? A friend of mine showed me how he pulled color from a nearly blac k Kodachrome duplicating it with a sandwiched contrast mask. I was amazed! I used to make the masks for lowering th e contrast of Ilfochrome prints, with Kodak Pan Masking, but I am not familiar with duplicating slides.

  6. #6

    "Brightening" of processed Ektachromes

    That's a bit nonsensical Paul. The Dmax of both Kodachrome and Velvia are ~3.7D, underexposed or not, so why would a scanner need to go to 4.2D to scan them?Anyway, the question was about Ektachrome, with a modest Dmax of around 3.3D.

  7. #7

    "Brightening" of processed Ektachromes

    Deviating a bit into scanner-land...

    Pete Andrews' point (that Dmax for EPN is fairly low) is technically correct, but from a practical standpoint I think that Paul Schillinger's advice is still good: If you want to lighten, you would do well to find a scanner with the widest dynamic range possible.

    Although many scanners have rated Dmax well in excess of 3.3, very few can actually extractl noise-free detail from something that dark. My experience is that scanner Dmax ratings tend to be inflated by 0.5-1.0 units of density relative to what they can actually handle witho0ut perceptible noise. If you really want to fetch all of the shadow detail possible out of a piece of film with a Dmax of 3.3 or 3.76, then a scanner with a rated Dmax of 4.2 would probably be the appropriate tool for the job.

  8. #8

    "Brightening" of processed Ektachromes

    Pete, thanks for correcting me, although I think you are right and you are wrong . I'm not a specialist but I have soon discovered the limitations of the electronic tools I'm using. Often scanner constructors have a questionable way of putting up the specifications for their products. For one it would be that the scanner is capable of producing sharp details and differentiated colors into the D-Max and for others that they will be able to catch some light and produce a muddy gray in the same density. Both woul d boast a D-Max of let's say, 4.0 but when you compare the resulting scans from a scanner costing 3 K and from one costing 30 K, you will soon discover what makes the difference. I am personally convinced that it is no t necessary to spend a fortune to get a good scanner, but then there are some limitations one has to pu t up with. Another precision is about density range, which is not to be mixed up with D-Max. A correctly exposed slide has a density range of 3.3 or 3.7, which is the density range most good scanners can analyze. But when a slide is underexposed, the density range can be the same, but the overall and Maximum Density are considera bly augmented and this is where you have to use a "beast" to get the colored pixels out of the film. Other wise, the dark areas will just be "dull black".

  9. #9

    "Brightening" of processed Ektachromes

    Yes. It's a complicated issue Paul, and I agree that a lot of low-end scanners have ideas above their station when it comes to dynamic range.The ability to pull shades of dark grey up to mid tones is more a function of a scanner's bit depth and the programmability of its 'gamma' curve, as well as its inherent noise, rather than the actual Dmax that it can 'see' down to.Most scanners could, in fact, see a higher density, simply by winding up the intensity of the lamp; but if it was that easy, then we'd have even more ridiculous claims from scanner manufacturers than we have already.

    The problem's compounded by the fact that the film's RGB curves flatten out and separate widely after 3.0D or so, and this is another good reason to go the scanner route, as this can be partially corrected in sofware, but not by chemical bleaching.Ektachrome appears to have less separation than Kodachrome or Velvia from its characteristic curves, but in real-life it always seems to get the blues in the shadow areas.

  10. #10

    "Brightening" of processed Ektachromes

    Pete, to illustrate what we are talking about, I have two scanners. One is a 7 y ears old drum scanner, dynamic range and D-Max are 3.6, 12 bits color. The other one is a recent flatbed boasting 3.7 dynamic range, 4.2 D-Max and 16 bits color depth. This is not a very expensive scanner (a little more than 3K) but yo u would think it is better than the previous. Not at all! I made comparison scans and the drum has far better pictur e quality in the dense areas despite it's modest specs. The flatbed is quite comparable when it stays within well exp osed films, with perhaps a little more USM needed to achieve the same "optical" sharpness. It's 16 bits differenciates millions of colors but as they will be compressed to the 8 bits of Photoshop, you will hardly see the difference from t he 12 bits scanner anyway.

    But, I agree, scanning a dark slide is certainly the best an easiest way to corr ect it.

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