View allAll Photos Tagged ProVia
Another mid range speed film in my collection, Fujifilm Provia 400FAs you see the name of Provia 400, Yes, you may wonder what it is.
There is a relation between 400F and 400X.
400X is the replacement of 400FI believe the 400F discontinued back in sometime between 2009 to 2010 and Fuji bring the next generation of Provia 400 slide film called 400X
In fact, the design of package changed and price went up(It always... when the company decide to stop make and replace it with new one....)
When I tried both 400F and 400X, I didn't see any improvement or differences. It made me so disappointed. It was the only mid range speed slide film I could use so I was happy when Fuji made a decision to keep it on the production line but well... It is hard to say I love this or I'm going to use it more because it is the only one 400 iso slide film on the market.
400 is my all time favorite films speed nowadays but when this is a monochrome or just some of C-41 based print film such as Superia Premium, PRO 400H or Portra 400...
What if you are big fan of this Provia 400s, why don't you just tell me or show me that I may want to try?
K10d + FA 50 Macro + AF 540 FGZ
Photographer Jun Kim's Facebook
I think it was provia but this was taken before I started paying close attention to that kind of thing, it may have actually been sensia. Makes me want to go surfing....
Film Simulation: Provia
Auto White Balance
Highlight - 2
Shadow - 1
Sharpness + 0
Color + 0
Noise Reduction - 2
4x5 Provia
Home Developed
Scanned by Imacon
I like 4x5 film. This is about a 40% crop of the entire transparency.
First trials with a large format Camera using Scheimplug principle to set the Depth of Field in the perspective. 6x9 Holder on a Arca Swiss F-Classic 4x5" loaded with an expired Provia 100F.
Ross Xpres f3.8 105mm on Agfa Record III, Provia 100F
Noritsu QSS-3203, enhanced in PhotoShop Elements
Here there is a noticeable loss of detail in the white areas,I need to make better compromises for the exposures.
Water fountain in Roman Sculpture Court
I took this picture with 1960's Carl Zeiss Jena's Werramatic 50mm f2.8 Tessar 35mm film camera, Fuji Provia 100 transparency film. I used either the built-in meter or Minolta Auto Meter VF. Sony A700 DSLR and Sony 100mm f2.8 Macro lens were used for digital conversion. Some color correction done on Lightroom 4.