- Sat Nov 18, 2006 8:58 pm
#196072
Since the primary goal of Maxwell Render is imitating a real camera, we cant forget about the film that this camera use.
I will suggest the introduction of a film type as an optional feature.
Something like this:
KODAK 35mm Slide Film
KODAK PROFESSIONAL ELITE Chrome 100 Film
Fine Grain
KODAK PROFESSIONAL ELITE Chrome 100 Film delivers extremely fine grain, pure colors and natural skin tones. It’s ideal for close-ups, portraits, and enlargements.
Extremely fine grain
Rich, pure colors and natural skin tones
KODAK PROFESSIONAL ELITE Chrome Extra Color 100 Film
Vivid Colors
KODAK PROFESSIONAL ELITE Chrome Extra Color 100 Film offers bright, bold, saturated colors, exceptional sharpness and very fine grain. It’s the perfect choice when shooting nature, wildlife, and scenics.
Produces vibrant, saturated colors
Outstanding sharpness and resolution
KODAK PROFESSIONAL ELITE Chrome 200 Film
General Purpose
KODAK PROFESSIONAL ELITE Chrome 200 Film provides higher speed without sacrificing image quality, making it a great general purpose film under variable lighting conditions or at higher shutter speeds.
Maximum versatility under variable lighting
Very fine grain
.... and so on....
FUJIFILM 35mm Slide Film
FUJICHROME Velvia100F
Professional-quality, medium-speed, daylight-type color reversal film with ultrafine grain, designed to produce high-contrast images with the highest color saturation among 100F series films. Incorporates new cyan, magenta and yellow couplers.
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Suited to a variety of uses such as landscape, nature, commercial, food, and interior applications.
FUJICHROME ASTIA100F
Professional-quality, medium-speed, daylight-type color reversal film with ultrafine grain (RMS: 7), subdued color reproduction and the softest tone reproduction among the 100F films. Incorporates new cyan, magenta and yellow couplers.
spacer
Suited to such uses as fashion, portraiture, interior, and product photography.
... and so on ...
Of course we can do this correction in post process, but would be really nice if we can get this feature inside maxwell.
It turns it into a much more complete product, IMO.
best regards,
nuno
I will suggest the introduction of a film type as an optional feature.
Something like this:
KODAK 35mm Slide Film
KODAK PROFESSIONAL ELITE Chrome 100 Film
Fine Grain
KODAK PROFESSIONAL ELITE Chrome 100 Film delivers extremely fine grain, pure colors and natural skin tones. It’s ideal for close-ups, portraits, and enlargements.
Extremely fine grain
Rich, pure colors and natural skin tones
KODAK PROFESSIONAL ELITE Chrome Extra Color 100 Film
Vivid Colors
KODAK PROFESSIONAL ELITE Chrome Extra Color 100 Film offers bright, bold, saturated colors, exceptional sharpness and very fine grain. It’s the perfect choice when shooting nature, wildlife, and scenics.
Produces vibrant, saturated colors
Outstanding sharpness and resolution
KODAK PROFESSIONAL ELITE Chrome 200 Film
General Purpose
KODAK PROFESSIONAL ELITE Chrome 200 Film provides higher speed without sacrificing image quality, making it a great general purpose film under variable lighting conditions or at higher shutter speeds.
Maximum versatility under variable lighting
Very fine grain
.... and so on....
FUJIFILM 35mm Slide Film
FUJICHROME Velvia100F
Professional-quality, medium-speed, daylight-type color reversal film with ultrafine grain, designed to produce high-contrast images with the highest color saturation among 100F series films. Incorporates new cyan, magenta and yellow couplers.
spacer
Suited to a variety of uses such as landscape, nature, commercial, food, and interior applications.
FUJICHROME ASTIA100F
Professional-quality, medium-speed, daylight-type color reversal film with ultrafine grain (RMS: 7), subdued color reproduction and the softest tone reproduction among the 100F films. Incorporates new cyan, magenta and yellow couplers.
spacer
Suited to such uses as fashion, portraiture, interior, and product photography.
... and so on ...
Of course we can do this correction in post process, but would be really nice if we can get this feature inside maxwell.
It turns it into a much more complete product, IMO.
best regards,
nuno


- By Jochen Haug