As Fuji shrinks, it appears that Kodak and Ferrania are trying to fill in the void. Now if somebody would make an ISO 400 E-6 emulsion, they'd have a captive market. There are some situations for which ISO 100 just isn't fast enough, even with a tripod. For some reason, race cars going around a track at high speed just won't attach to a tripod!
Maybe. I would like to scratch together some money after my holiday in May and order a few propacks of Acros, provided that the panic buying hasn't increased prices by then. But today I stopped by a camerashop on my way to the train home and bought a roll of TMX in 135 and 120, each.
Prior to the sad news I had no plans to even look at this film, but lets see if it comes close. I'm sure that sharpness and grain are as good or better than the Fuji.
What I love about Acros are the shadows. When exposed right these give the film a characteristic look, unlike anything else I've tried so far. The challenge is to be careful enough not to loose the deep shadows entirely. In those cases the transition into those dead shadow is often too swift to look really good. Would that be a steep toe?
Lets see what TMX is going to do. It'd be nice, too, if it liked to be developed in Rodinal.
Last December on my last day in Hong Kong I took a morning walk before checking out of the hotel. I strolled around the quiet streets of Western District on that Sunday morning and shot Provia 400X, probably in my X700. The speed was really good to have, given the low morning light in the shade of high rises. It feels a bit like using Tri-X/HP5 in E6. Without the grain and the extreme latitude, of course. But versatile. Getting an ISO400 E6 film back, would be nice. Provided it's as good as RXP.