Found a lot of 3 rolls of Kodak Ultra Color 100 (100UC) which I picked up since no one else seemed especially interested. I've had some fun with the color look-up tables in RawTherapee for the 400 speed version of this film, and I've seen some nice shots from that actual stock, but I didn't know what to expect from the low-speed version.
My initial impression: similar to Reala, but the greens have a saturation that is distinct from the "Fuji green," and reds are less pronounced. Seems to be more headroom here for colors keeping saturation in the higher luminance range. With the contrast and red punch I'm not sure I would want to try this for any kind of portraiture.
Thank god it was a "test roll" because I made pretty much every mistake possible and only a few of them are even displayed here:
The first frame here you can see some heavy vignetting, this is from using the lens hood of the 135mm lens on the 55mm wide-angle. Not surprising, but good to know.
The statues in the church lawn weren't supposed to have that spike from a fence separating them, but this is what happens sometimes when you're shooting a TLR!
Tulips are fine, no notes.
Leaves from tree are both missed focus and also motion blur.
This is omitting the shots where I completely underexposed because I didn't have the bellows factor indicator set for the wide-angle lens where it is severely worse than the 135mm I use more often.
CineStill Cs41 2-bath (standard process)
Nikon LS-8000 => VueScan => Negative Lab Pro

