File :-(, x, )
studioeeg
I've had access to dark room at school and when I get a chance I use them, but when I get back home I have a friends studio in which I can work in that is entirely digital.

Heres my question
I like to shoot with 35mm/120 film I tend to overexposure the photograph. My question is this
If i over exposure a 35mm picture through the roll by one ore two bars can I get the same compensation of getting back information into the picture in Lightroom or PS as I would in the darkroom.
>> Anonymous
What the fuck does one or two bars mean? Speak in stops.
>> Anonymous
learn to meter.
>> studioeeg
I generally overexpose what my meter readers by one to two stops, in the darkroom I compensate for it and usually get a cleaner print then if i had a perfectly meterd photograph

Its a method that works. All I am asking is would it work as well in a digital program If I scan my negatives.
>> Anonymous
you should compensate by underespose during shooting, then everything is happy afterwards
>> Anonymous
are you people dumb ? you dont ever over or underexpose your photos . . .learn to metter for what your shooting for and take it off auto
>> thefamilyman !!rTVzm2BgTOa
>>131418
over exposing colour print film by upto a stop is good
>> ac !!VPzQAxYPAMA
>>131380
>All I am asking is would it work as well in a digital program If I scan my negatives.
Yes.
>> des
>>131424
Yes, if the scanner isn't shit. Also: vuescan ftw