Agreed. I like the average results with 50 better. I have
found,though, that occasionally I will get results that
are almost murky. Those pictures are dark and very, very
saturated. Usually, though, they are okay. When I shoot
with 40 sometimes they are slightly overexposed, IMO. Once
you have a feel for the film you can adjust to the situation,
and perhaps bracket accordingly.
-Sean
http://www.cgl.ucsf.edu/home/smooney/
Stanford University
>>> All this talk about velvia remind me a question: what is the iso
>>setting to
>> > use? 50 is probably too much.
>
>ISO 40 was suggested by people who wanted the sharpness and fine
>grain of Velvia, but who did not care for the saturated colors. I
>like the way Velvia looks most of the time and use ISO 50. If you
>have a situation where you think things may become too saturated for
>your taste, you could always dial in a 1/3 stop more exposure with
>the compensation dial.
>
>You should try a roll at each speed and see which you like better.
>- --
>Winsor Crosby
>Long Beach, California
--------------------------
Sean Mooney, PhD
Stanford University
Cell: 415-370-5909
http://www.cgl.ucsf.edu/home/smooney
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