itt: post your non-standard color photos. your lomo turquoise, your harman red, your aerochrome, and all the like. I guess if you do weird stuff with your digital sensors that's fine too.shot a roll of kono donau II last weekend, its a blue monochromatic c-41 film rated at ISO 8.
>>4515552it has some non-blue pigment in it clearly. overexposed it pushes greenish and under it becomes almost purple. the negatives look weird too, its a clear plastic base but in the frame it's a characteristic yellow-orangey look
it makes for decent digital editing too since its super low ISO, very little grain. no idea how it'd print
tried my hand at a bit of editing/cropping as well, I like how they turned out
>>4515562I guess that one was actually just leveled and edited normally, these have much more slider movement
anyway pls respond and show me your funny color pics
Ill post some random stuff I did. I had some yellow Polaroids at one point
I also tried doing a trichrome effect. It was shot with my Ricoh GR3. I just took 3 b&w jpg's and they turned out with really weird colors.
>>4515616another
>>4515615a portrait
>>4515617Another one with a similar approach.
>>4515551Ziatype. You coat the paper in a blend of different chemicals and it changes the color/contrast of the print. The process is somewhat similar to platinum palladium prints.
>>4515615its a lovely shade of piss>>4515616>>4515619reminds me of the cover for -><- by collider>>4515622very cool effect and look, but I wish the brushwork were more intentional and the composition wasn't cut off.
>>4515662Yeah agreed... It's the only image I could easily find that had some of the more dramatic color that ziatype can produce. You can get deep purple, blue, black, browns, and even split tones if you do it right. Very cool process and mich more accessible than plat/pd.Here's another one. I have some of my dog as well, but I guess I'll stick with eggies for the time being. Most of the dog ones are pretty neutral toned anyways.A fun fact ablut ziatype is that the images are incredibly stable. Platinum/palladium processes are estimated to last around or greater than 500 years!