film, photography, color, cinestill, 800T, 85b filter Rick Alarcon film, photography, color, cinestill, 800T, 85b filter Rick Alarcon

boreal afternoons: cinestill 800 T (with 85b filter)

Rick Alarcon is a US photographer in Paris , France, specializing in portraits, events, and artistic photography.

Gonna start off with some self-promotion: Help support my analog film work, could really use your help! To find out how to do so, visit SUPPORT here.

The groundhog has emerged from his hole. Cinestill 800T shot with an 85b filter shot over the course of this winter. Tungsten film is really nice with the 85b filter, gives the whites a more bluish tone, which looks nice for the season. I wanted 800 ISO because it gets dark out here real early, safer choice for things (though I could do without all of the grain), but have to use the filter, otherwise everything comes out blue during daylight shooting. People shoot it without the filter though, at night, makes the shops and resto lights look real nice. Too cold to sit out in the evening.

What’s all the red? Two things:

  • Halation effect from the Cinestill film itself. This is just a characteristic of the stock, see also my post here. This will occur mostly in the highlights. Some people like it, some don’t.

  • The more linear red streaking is actually caused from static electricity! Crazy, eh? It can happen from a hard/quick advance, especially shows up on Cinestill films. I like that I’m adding electric charge to my images (see ‘embers’), makes things a little more visceral feeling. I’ll have to make sure not to advance so quickly next time, or maybe not and really go for it.

Read More