Quote Originally Posted by HDNitehawk View Post
It is the color that is the difference.
Are both of those adjusted, first original second your modified?

Adjusting the balance in those two images, notice the grass off to the left. Notice the hue is red in the film and looks brown in digital.
Adjusting temperature corrected it to its natural brown hue. But at that time of day is that truly as it appears. The red of a sunset would come in to play.
It is actually something I noticed early on, you can balance a picture and take out some of the color put in to the landscape due to the light. But is it really representative, only you know because you know when you took the picture. The little dropper tool can change the time of day.


I am liking the colors of the film. Maybe it takes some of the PP guess work out of the equation.
In post #36, the first image is the R5 file that I spent time in LR trying to get it to match the MF film file. The second image in post #36 is the MF film file (#5a above).

There are some odd colors when you really look at it. Some of the snow in #5a has a green tint to it. But, in the modified R5 image, I am noticing that the universal changes I made to try to get other parts of the image to match has messed with the white steeple on top of the town hall in the center of the image. Not a big deal, and I likely would not have noticed except I prefer it in the film image below.

The lighting was tricky. I was hoping for a good sunset, but clouds on the horizon blocked it. So, the #5 images were taken right around what should have been sunset. Images #6 was taken just after sunset.