A few weeks ago i was in the frame of mind to buy a cheap 100ft roll of 400 speed film. I was settled on Ultrafine Xtreme, because I researched it to be a good film in the budget category. At the last moment I changed my mind and went $10 higher on the Arista EDU Ultra 400 because I ran upon the following site:
https://emulsive.org/reviews/film-review-fomapan-400-arista-edu-ultra-400
I'd read that the Arista was inferior to the Ultrafine regarding the poor response to underexposure. But it was said (by this site) to have a small amount of near-infrared sensitivity. So I bought it and an R-72 filter to play with. Lo and behold, I actually got a couple test negatives that look very "infrared" in their quality. I did my tests at 1,2,4,8,16, 32 seconds at f/8 with the 72 filter in midday sunshine and developed in Microdol 1:3 for 25mins at 75 degrees F. I have more testing to do, but it looks like the 4 and 8 second negatives definitely have the qualities I remember from my HIE days. I haven't printed them yet due to my extremely inconvenient darkroom access. But so far, it sure appears that I may have a poor person's version of infrared to some degree.
I can say that the negatives look very much like they have a great deal of infrared quality, and without the blooming that always disappointed me with HIE. The grain is certainly finer than HIE in D-76, which was horribly grainy. I would be very much interested in hearing from others on this discovery. I've been shooting straight photography all my life. Now in late life, I'm inspired to take a totally new direction. Indisputably, infrared film can take an ordinary unremarkable scene and make it quite different.
I now take my R-72 filter around with me when out on errands and such and put it up to my eye and see totally different things. Very interesting.
https://emulsive.org/reviews/film-review-fomapan-400-arista-edu-ultra-400
I'd read that the Arista was inferior to the Ultrafine regarding the poor response to underexposure. But it was said (by this site) to have a small amount of near-infrared sensitivity. So I bought it and an R-72 filter to play with. Lo and behold, I actually got a couple test negatives that look very "infrared" in their quality. I did my tests at 1,2,4,8,16, 32 seconds at f/8 with the 72 filter in midday sunshine and developed in Microdol 1:3 for 25mins at 75 degrees F. I have more testing to do, but it looks like the 4 and 8 second negatives definitely have the qualities I remember from my HIE days. I haven't printed them yet due to my extremely inconvenient darkroom access. But so far, it sure appears that I may have a poor person's version of infrared to some degree.
I can say that the negatives look very much like they have a great deal of infrared quality, and without the blooming that always disappointed me with HIE. The grain is certainly finer than HIE in D-76, which was horribly grainy. I would be very much interested in hearing from others on this discovery. I've been shooting straight photography all my life. Now in late life, I'm inspired to take a totally new direction. Indisputably, infrared film can take an ordinary unremarkable scene and make it quite different.
I now take my R-72 filter around with me when out on errands and such and put it up to my eye and see totally different things. Very interesting.
