Saving Private Kodak - The REAL bleach bypass movie film look
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- čas přidán 3. 07. 2024
- After re watching one of my favorite series, Band of Brothers, i starting researching the film stock used to film the series, discovered the bleach bypass developing method.
hope you enjoy guys, maybe inspire you to try some alternative film processing.
JUST REMEMBER - under expose your film by 1-2 stops - Věda a technologie
This is exciting! I love SavingbPrivate Ryan and the Band of Brothers series. I never knew that the look was achieved through the actual film processing! Great video!!! 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼
It's cool to see some experimentation with film to get new looks. You just put me on to the whole bleach skip thing, I never even heard of that process until this video. I'll definitely have to try that out in the future. Thanks for sharing this!
Zone Focused thanks mate
Great video! I love the bleach bypass look and comparing it on different film stocks, and digital simulations. Also, you have that perfect mix of "handsome" and "could def kick my ass."
Thank you for sharing! I want to try this now!
Besides the clipping, I really like the blown-out look! For some reason, it puts me in mind of some sort of dingy '70s-'80s film.
Beautiful I was looking for this color palette as well
Thanks for doing this! It's been a while and I forgot what Australia looks like, these scenes make me wanna head to Australia. Especially that beach image!
Yeap! Perth has done it again! Beautiful images Coop!
James Posilero thanks mate
The beach scene is my favorite too, good job! I really want to try this process now.
Chris Pugh thanks mate
Quite a nice video, I am a big fan of Bands of Brother and I always found the colors interesting, now I know how they did it
COOPS - Just going to say this is so random, however maybe three weeks ago before I headed off on my latest photo trip I too started re watching band of Brothers... Utter brilliant series
Tom Mason it’s a classic, so well done
For sure i'm gonna try it! Love the color palette! Thanks for the tip!
Rémi Grousset thanks for watching
also, just about every big budget hip hop music video in the late 90s/early 00s did bleach bypass then in the telecine got super saturated.. Puff Daddy's "shiny suit" videos were infamous for its bleach bypassing, fisheye lenses & in-camera speed ramping . Every Hype Williams directed video had it.. Busta Rhymes, Miss Elliot., Marilyn Manson, Britney Spears, NSync, BSB even parodies like The Offspring, Pretty Fly for a White Guy, all shot on film, all got bleach bypassing.. it was a standard thing for music videos destined for MTV.
Fantastic vid mate. Very interesting love the colours. Never seen band of brothers.. yes I know I’ve had stick for it before haha. Needs to happen. Great vid very interesting! Amazing colours 😊👍🏻🎞
looks very cool... nice work...
Great stuff! I'd love to see a follow up with a roll you expose the way you wanted.
Cool experiment man! Interesting that bypassing bleach pushes film.
niceeee , decent results for a first go ... think your next round will be very good dude ... nice idea .... the surf station or life guard station is fantastic , its a keeper .... you only need 1 good shot ... :)
Guy Butterworth thanks mate. Yeah next time it should turn out better
Damn this is fantastic. Shot at @11:24 is killer
great content!!! keep it up!!!
Awesome experiment to do Coops. Keep up the good work
Joe Nelley thanks for watching mate
@@shootswithcoops often shooting film stocks specifically looking for a muted colour palette. Never thought to look for processing techniques to do it
Nice!! I have to try this!
Excellent video! Cheers
Very cool! I will try this technique out.
Was always turned off to this technique because of the lightroom preset haha, definitely giving it a go now
It’s worth a shot
Very cool! I have got to try this.
The Photographer's Eye thanks mate. Worth giving it a go
120 on 645 camera? Lens? Nice video! Congrats and thank you for that one.
So cool!!
Nice to see someone experimenting with analogue techniques. However, it's worth pointing out that Saving Private Ryan used ENR which is a type of skip bleach bypass applied to the PRINT, not the negative. Skip bleaching leaves silver on the thicker parts of the image, which in your case (on a negative) is the highlights. This explains why your highlights are blown out. On a positive print, the thicker areas are the dark/black areas, which is what gives SPR it's gritty contrast reminiscent of B&W photography from D-Day. What you demonstrate here is essentially the opposite effect!
Awesome. I will give it a try with Vision 3 500T where I still have some bulk load material left :)
Btw Silbersalz is from my home town Stuttgart in Germany. They also offer Bleach bypass treatment after ECN2 development and super high res scanning. Shipment to Australia might be a pain though.
Ok I NOW want to try this!
Very creative video
Interesting content, thanks! :-)
At 6:14, he must have misspoken about processing time for stop bath. Ilford recommends a 10 second bath, not 3 1/2 minutes. There is certainly nothing about the film which requires a massively extended stop bath. Although 3+ minutes in stop bath probably will not hurt your film images, it presents a needless waste of processing time. Otherwise, this unique information on a topic I've never hears of before. Thanks for his effort.
Good job on this you've got me fired up to try leaving out the Blix as well. Did you do any follow-up videos with this process with the correct exposure?
Raychristofer thanks Man, not yet. Just got some Kodak vision 250d to try the whole process again
@@shootswithcoops hi there, was going to ask the same question! Beach scene awesome mate, wanna see a full roll correctly exposed and developed the same way! good job though! cheers from france!
Hey mate! Noob question but what do you mean by exposing for the shadows?
Cheers!
Looks absolutely amazing! Thanks a lot for the tip, gotta try that now :-)
I think the CineStill 50D is actually an ISO 25 film, so it's a bit strange that it was so blown out. But I guess you have to be a lot more accurate with the exposure when using this technique. Great stuff!
Great video and thanks for sharing everything, even your mistake 😉
Darryl Carey now I now for next time. I wanted to share regardless so people don’t repeat my mistake. It’s a cool process
Amazing ! can you tel us what dilution was your fixer ? so we would only be basicly underexposing the negative to get better result ?
Jeremy Lachance thanks Man, ilford rapid fixer 1:10 dilution. And yeh an underexpose buy 1-1.5 stops
My bleach bypass recently produced incredibly thin negatives with barely any information, it was expired kodak royal supra 800 tho, so maybe it was just too old
lauserlu yeah some fresh film probably have worked a lot better
Thanks!
Lomography Metropolis seems to have this look by default. Thinking about trying it but it's expensive and I honestly don't know if it's worth it for me.
Have you tried shooting with the original Kodak vision 3 film that hasn't had the remote removed ? It's very nice but you need to make sure the lab can process ecn2 which is the specific chemistry for these films.
Adrian Long it’s in my list. Found some on eBay in 120 that’s been re spooled from imax film
800T is out of stock everywhere 😭 so keen to pick some up
Cody Partington tell me about it! I wanted to try this with 800T but no one in Australia has any
Shootswithcoops Filmneverdie in Melbourne where I grab my film says Cinestill are having production issues and should be back in stock sometime soon
Nice work. Looks like it could be worth a crack.
Are you going to re-do this video with the 800t and also underexposing the images? We need a follow up Coopslaw
Obie yeah Man, As soon as I can get my hands on some 800t. But even B&H photo is out of Stock, no where in Australia has any either
@@shootswithcoops I just checked my locals and didn't realise there's a shortage. I'd ship you the box I have in my fridge if I could keep it on ice
So, doing the bleach by pass thing is like pushing the film?
Joaquin Vega no, it’s underexposing and then not bleaching the film when processing. Pushing is underexposing and then overdeveloping
In Cyprus, Kodak gold 200 €20
Eduardo Pavez Goye shoots with this stuff. Check him out. Thanks mate. Really interesting.
As a noob, how do I get anywhere near this, let alone developing at home? If i had 800T and under exposed it would be 400?
Erik Leypoldt if you were doing it with 800T you would shoot it at 1600 and then develop with the process I talked about
everywhere in perth over prices their film, especially at fitz. I buy online from ikigai when im not in a rush :)
Can this be done on any color film?
Julius Caesar sure can
Hate watching war in any guise.
You said you should underexpose by one or two stops so you should’ve shot the 50 at 100 or 200 but shouldn’t you go the other way and shoot at 12 or 25 to underexpose?
travis shannon if I shot at 25 or 12 I would be over exposing the film not underexposed
A lower ISO would mean the camera would meter for a slower shutter or more open Aperture, therefore overexposing.
It just looks overexposed and desaturated to me... did i miss anything?