Retro/Old look with 35mm film? - tricks for 35mm film
I try a couple of pictures before the start and want photos authentic retro look, as if they were taken in the years 70 or 80 could be. When can a bit like a beginner in photography, you advise him points with the 35 mm?
I will probably buy an expired film, but I heard expired film that has been stored in the refrigerator, not very different from the normal film, so I wonder what I could to the film for this nostalgic look I 'm do.
What happens if I leave the movie (s) all day in the heat (still hidden from the light, of course)?


4 comments:
You can add a sepia get well if you copy the movie in black and white on colored paper. Apart from that I can not help. The movies I used in the 80 - Ilford FP4, HP5, Kodak Ektar - are almost the same as now emulsions.
Inadvertently, I left a movie in the heat at once and it was pretty good, but I would not recommend it. By the end of the films varied results. Only one station of the additional burden, but another had a strange green tinge that only 3 images (night photos) is unusable.
In the 70s and 80s, news agencies used Tri-X film together and spun at 650 ASA instead of 400 grains for less obvious. Since the photos were examined and in a newspaper published in the shadow detail is not important.
We have mainly used in the film developed D-76 1:1 or by pressing the film 1200 Acufine developers.
See if you get what you want.
It is easier now with digital images.
Living Picture (Adobe Lightroom)
http://www.flickr.com/photos/little_pook ...
Original:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/little_pook ...
(Not the same picture, of course, but taken in the same place.)
I really only have to turn 35mm film, then you do it in Photoshop and play with saturation and red. If you look hard enough, there are extensive tutorials on them.
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