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Want to see how much you can overexpose C-41 color negative film and still get usable shots? Photographer Daniel Lachman of Retro Camera Review decided to film out recently after coming across a broken Mamiya 645E with a busted light meter.
�With digital images, overexposing can ruin your photos at the dreaded �255 white level,’� Lachman writes. �But with C41 color film, it�s really the inverse relationship, with detail getting lost with under-exposure. But in terms of over-exposure, it theoretically has no limit.�
To test this �limitlessness,� Lachman took a roll of C-41 120 medium format film and shot the same scene with various exposures that ranged from -3 stops under correct exposure to +6 stops over.
Here�s what the negative frames looked like after the film was processed (the �C� frame is the correctly exposed shot):
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Now here�s the trick: with a professional-grade film scanner, a ton of detail can be obtained from frames that look completely unusable. Here�s what the scanned photos look like:
3 Stops Underexposed
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2 Stops Underexposed
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1 Stop Underexposed
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Correctly Exposed
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1 Stop Overexposed
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2 Stops Overexposed
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3 Stops Overexposed
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4 Stops Overexposed
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5 Stops Overexposed
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6 Stops Overexposed
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�Turns out you can overexpose nearly 6 stops until the scanner starts losing the ability to shoot through the negative,� Lachman says. �What I took away from this is that film basically can�t be overexposed, it can just be too dense for the scanner to be able to shoot through the negative. But the information will always be there.�
Pretty amazing, huh?
Image credits: Header illustration based on photo by Jason Rogers, all other photos by Daniel Lachman/Retro Camera Review and used with permission

Started out doing photography at the age of 6 using an uncle's old 1940 kodak brownie box camera. At 15 years of age, I decided to buy my very own 1975 Praktica SLR camera. I now shoot with a Nikon D850. I do unpaid TFP and commercial paid work.