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Did I Save These Images?

January 11, 2024

Saving Or Ruining film Images In Post Processing

While visiting the Palacio de Cristal in Retiro Park in Madrid, Spain, in 2019 I made several images with my Leica M4 and Delta 400 film.


The Leica at that moment was quite new to me - I purchased it just a month before in South Africa - and working with an external light meter or guessing my exposure settings with the sunny-16 rule was not something I was very much used to yet.


As a consequence, several images turned out to be quite under-exposed. Resulting in thin and grainy negatives, which showed clearly in the scans I got back from the lab.


I played around with the digital versions of these images, first in Lightroom and later in the 2019 version of ON1 I, but never really to my satisfaction.


We are in 2024 now, and ON1 got some major and interesting upgrades, including Brilliance AI and an updated version of their NoNoiseAI and TackSharpAI tools.


This encouraged me to revisit these images and put them through the ON1 works.



And to be honest: I like the results. While I admit they absolutely have a very processed look to them now, to my opinion this has created a look that pleases my eye: very clean, very slick, almost graphic.



I wonder what you think of this: did I manage to save these images, or did I only make a bad (underexposed and grainy) photo worse in another way?

In Photo Background, Photography Info, Photography Skills Tags artificial intelligence, AI, AI algorithms in image creation, b&w, bnw, b/w, candid photography in Madrid, candid photography, candid, digitization of art, film photography, how to meter for aperture and shutter speed with a Leica M4, high-contrast black and white, ilford delta 400, monochrome photography, Madrid, Leica M4, metering light with a Leica M4, shooting with a Leica M4, sunny-16, sunny 16, using an exernal light meter, post-processing black and white film images, ON1, processing with ON1, ON1 Brilliance AI, ON1 NoNoise AI, ON1 TackSharp AI, Using ON1 Brilliance AI on scanned film negatives, saving underexposed film negatives, processing under exposed film negatives, Palacio de Cristal in Retiro Park in Madrid Spain
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