Portra 400 or Ektar 100 handle mercurial skies over Lake Bohinj and bright facades along Ljubljana’s river. Rate Portra at 200 for smoother shadows, or keep Ektar at box when you crave sharp, saturated greens. Overexpose by two thirds, meter for faces, and trust the highlights to compress gently. This approach calms mixed light and produces scans that grade easily without wrestling saturation, especially when time on the road is scarce.
For crystalline summits and glassy lakes, Provia 100F or Velvia 50 reward patience and meter placement. Spot meter the brightest textured highlight, place it at plus two, and lock composition. Use a solid tripod, cable release, and shield from wind. Bracket tightly, mind reciprocity on exposures longer than a second, and note that shadows will fall away dramatically, creating graphic, sculptural frames that feel like postcards carved from light.
Ilford HP5, Fomapan 400, or Kodak Tri‑X thrive in shifting alpine weather and narrow alleys where color distracts. Rate slightly lower at 320 for kinder shadows, then push one stop when clouds thicken, informing the lab clearly. Choose yellow or orange filtration to separate stone and sky, and lean on stand development for forgiving contrast. The resulting negatives carry mood without fuss, letting compositions breathe with texture, gesture, and quiet human presence.