In article <49g7hn$g0l@peabody.Colorado.EDU>, keivom@rintintin.Colorado.EDU says...
>I am making slides of my b+w prints on my portfolio. I will be using
>color slide film. However, since it is expensive and I will need to
>bracket the exposures, I was thinking of shooting a 36-exp roll of 10
>images(bracketing the exposures -1/2, meter reading, +1/2).
>I have to make 5 copies of each correctly exposed slide because I am
>applying to five newspapers for internships. To save cash, I was >thiking of making dupes of the correctly exposed slides. Is this a >good idea or should I shoot 5 rolls using the same technique of >bracketing.
Color balancing dupes of B&W images shot on color slide material may
be kinda iffy, and dupes are never quite so sharp as the originals.
If you are shooting the originals under controlled conditions, why not
shoot one bracket set for each image, get them processed, then go back and repeat the successes 4-5 more times? BTW, I was leafing through the current Pop Photo at the grocery store tonight and came across a rather
nice photo of yours of a fight shot with a fisheye (great people lens, huh?) at night - really nice!
Hope this helps.