UNLESS you are going to project your slide or use your transparency for absolute color reproduction, if you are planning on making a print with your film, you can expose for more of the shadow and pull the film 2 stops. Practice this and you'll find that it works quite well. You are making it up any ways due to film choice, etc, so let the color go, you will adjust it in printing and or scanning. Eric Neilsen Photography 4101 Commerce Street Suite 9 Dallas, TX 75226 http://e.neilsen.home.att.net http://ericneilsenphotography.com Skype ejprinter > -----Original Message----- > From: pure-silver-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:pure-silver- > bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Shannon Stoney > Sent: Thursday, May 17, 2007 10:04 AM > To: pure-silver@xxxxxxxxxxxxx > Subject: [pure-silver] shamefully off topic > > I know this is really bad to ask on this list, but... when exposing > transparency film, do you expose for the highlights (the opposite of > negative film)? > > --shannon > > ========================================================================== > =================================== > To unsubscribe from this list, go to www.freelists.org and logon to your > account (the same e-mail address and password you set-up when you > subscribed,) and unsubscribe from there. ============================================================================================================= To unsubscribe from this list, go to www.freelists.org and logon to your account (the same e-mail address and password you set-up when you subscribed,) and unsubscribe from there.