
Originally Posted by
AK83
At the risk of stating the obvious, you get film in both negative and postive(slide) types.
Negative film(the most common type for just getting regular photo prints) needs a layer of processing to revert it back to human understandable colours.
So if you "take a photo" of a negative film frame with a digital camera, it's still a negative.
If you shoot this negative in jpg mode on the camera, the reversal process in software looks 'ugly'(relative term), but if using camera raw format, can come up really nice, and with some basic manipulation came end up looking even nicer than a standard lab print of the negative too(ie. my reference to dodge and burn whilst photographing the negative). And once the negative has been captured and in your preferred editing software, further processing if needed can reveal even more detail again.
Overall, using a half decent modern digital camera in raw format allows a ton of editing leeway if you're after getting the most out of a particular film.
The process of film reversal is very easy to do. I think I remember that some software even have a one click step to do this, but doing it manually is also trivially easy, once you do it once or twice.
If you know about software editing, then you know of the histogram(levels and curves) tool. Usually the levels curves tool shows a linear/direct gradient line, from low darks/blacks to high highlights/whites.
You grab the lower end of the gradient and lift it to high, and then grab the high end of the gradient and bring it back to low levels. The end result is that the previously linear gradient will then look like a sinewave curve.
This will then invert the once negative digital image into a colour corrected version. Once you have the corrected colour, it will almost certainly have a way off white balance(mine were all blue, which is to be expected), and I then used a click to whitebalance, click on a white/grey/black point in the image and it transformed from this blue colour image into a nicely balanced colour image.
From what I can understand with this QPIX devices, they seem to capture in jpg only. There is no mention in the manuals of any option for file format.
So this negative slide scanner machine has the option to do the colour reversal itself, which saves some time in doing those processing steps in software.
But in saying that, the only time you need to selectively do this colour reversal step is if you change the light source used to shoot the film with your camera.
Once I got my reversal process to my liking, I saved it as a batch edit process, and then applied it to all images I wanted reversed.
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