Linear or non-linear, ColorNeg doesn't care.
Posted: Thu Sep 18, 2025 8:30 pm
A 1998 rural shot taken with the Contax G2 and its superb trio of Zeiss lenses, with Fujifilm PR 400 B&W film, scanned with an Imacon scanner.
A non-linear file is more complicated to manage, but ColorNeg helps.
To achieve this result, the use of the FilmType/SubType/FilmGamma tools, as well as FilmicRelight, was essential during the process.
I can't imagine how much effort I would have put in, and how far I could have come, without using these tools. I don't even want to try, and I don't believe it's possible to achieve this, even if this isn't necessarily the best processing in the world.
However, it looks ready for a beautiful print on matte paper, given its rustic texture.
Repeatedly using these tools, before making other adjustments, continues to make a difference; it allows you to adjust and enhance the low and high lights, relating them to each other. Favoring one over the other, or achieving the best compromise in terms of brightness, contrast, and overall image appearance. This allows you to characterize the digital negative film, making it the ideal starting point for further adjustments.
A non-linear file is more complicated to manage, but ColorNeg helps.
To achieve this result, the use of the FilmType/SubType/FilmGamma tools, as well as FilmicRelight, was essential during the process.
I can't imagine how much effort I would have put in, and how far I could have come, without using these tools. I don't even want to try, and I don't believe it's possible to achieve this, even if this isn't necessarily the best processing in the world.
However, it looks ready for a beautiful print on matte paper, given its rustic texture.
Repeatedly using these tools, before making other adjustments, continues to make a difference; it allows you to adjust and enhance the low and high lights, relating them to each other. Favoring one over the other, or achieving the best compromise in terms of brightness, contrast, and overall image appearance. This allows you to characterize the digital negative film, making it the ideal starting point for further adjustments.