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Kwz Ink Green #5


lgsoltek

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Green #5 has more yellow than #3, but my writing sample looks much darker than Mrs KWZI's writing on the label.

 

Splash

fpn_1475698784__kwzi-green5-spl.jpg

Sample

(White copy paper, Pilot Elabo/Falcon SF)

fpn_1475698768__kwzi-green5.jpg

Compare

(My new bottle of Green #3 looks bluer than I remembered... Maybe it's the comparison with #5 that brings out the blue aspect of it.)

fpn_1475698772__kwzi-green5-com.jpg

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Nice Irish green... BTW I hate when I have to choose from numerous colours of the same tone, it seems so easy when you see one in a review then you go to the seller and see 5-6-10 shades that are almost the same and you are puzzled. Then you are certain no more which on e is the one you originally wanted :rolleyes: :lticaptd:

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    • inkstainedruth
      Thanks for the info (I only used B&W film and learned to process that).   Boy -- the stuff I learn here!  Just continually astounded at the depth and breadth of knowledge in this community! Ruth Morrisson aka inkstainedruth 
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    • Ceilidh
      >Well, I knew people who were photography majors in college, and I'm pretty sure that at least some of them were doing photos in color,<   I'm sure they were, and my answer assumes that. It just wasn't likely to have been Kodachrome.  It would have been the films I referred to as "other color films." (Kodachrome is not a generic term for color film. It is a specific film that produces transparencies, or slides, by a process not used for any other film. There are other color trans
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      @Ceilidh -- Well, I knew people who were photography majors in college, and I'm pretty sure that at least some of them were doing photos in color, not just B&W like I learned to process.  Whether they were doing the processing of the film themselves in one of the darkrooms, or sending their stuff out to be processed commercially?  That I don't actually know, but had always assumed that they were processing their own film. Ruth Morrisson aka inkstainedruth   ETA: And of course
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      Kodachrome 25 was the most accurate film for clinical photography and was used by dermatologists everywhere. I got magnificent results with a Nikon F2 and a MicroNikkor 60 mm lens, using a manually calibrated small flash on a bracket. I wish there were a filter called "Kodachrome 25 color balance" on my iPhone camera.
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