Sirius Glass
Subscriber
Basically I choose black & white films by speed and traditional grain. Mostly I use Tri-X 400, HP5+ for 4"x5", Plus-X which I still have, FP4, and I am playing with Delta 3200 and P3200 for long lenses.
Good luck with that. Ask for a return of Kodachrome too and a few people will really appreciate your effort.We need to petition Kodak for the return of Pan-X!
Films vary at both ends of the spectrum and we can see that in their published data. At the red end they can have cutoffs at any thing from 600 nm (orange) to 700 nm (deep red). These will have a strong effect on human skin, or anything else that is reddish.
At the blue end they vary in both sensitivity to blue light which we can see, and UV light that we can't. Both are abundant in blue skies hence their effect on landscape photography.
And there is often a dip in sensitivity in the middle (green). Vegetation often comes out darker than we visualized it at the scene.
So there isn't really a "neutral" film in that they will all portray colors as grey tones in slightly different ways.
That's why I used to use Efke 25. It was weak in the red, strong in the blue, and had a dip in the middle. It made prints that I loved, they looked like mid-20th Century prints.
Interestingly it seemed much more necessary with older style films like Fomapan. My HP5 with a Yellow filter seems to lower contrast, probably due to the conditions I shoot and that by darkening the sky, it stands out less.I've never found a regular B&W film that doesn't give excellent results without a filter. That's Foma, Forte, EFKE, Kodak, Ilford, Fuji. Only reason I say regular because Ortho films are different.
It's very rare I use a filter. However that's the way I work and see, others do use filters to great effect. As I said in your filter post the only one I use is Green.
Ian
Good luck with that. Ask for a return of Kodachrome too and a few people will really appreciate your effort.![]()
Delta and TMax are about as good as they come. If you complain about those, you really should do some introspection instead.
Introspection indeed.
The differences people are talking about here are trivial. This entire topic smacks of “which stuff will make my prints good?”.
Has anyone ever shot Pan-X in and X-Pan?We need to petition Kodak for the return of Pan-X!
Interestingly it seemed much more necessary with older style films like Fomapan. My HP5 with a Yellow filter seems to lower contrast, probably due to the conditions I shoot and that by darkening the sky, it stands out less.
A few years ago I tried to compare the spectral sensitivity. So I shot several films outside on the same day around noon - without filter (Normal), then with Yellow, Green and Red. For sure not very scientific, just my two cents.
Interesting. One type of contrast or effect that colored filters give is differentiation between colors, as most modern pan films are designed to give a flat response. Foma 200 and to a little lesser degree Foma 400 really create a differentiation between RGB and CMY (Foma 400 a little less here). Foma 400 with a green filter is good also.
Did you just shoot that target pictured, or did you derive those densities from some other scene?
I used a target made up of several items on a grayish background, see picture attached. The gray card at the bottom was used for metering. The gray card was then also used as reverence point when enlarging the negatives, trying to get the prints as similar as possible. Later the prints were scanned and on the computer I only cut out the upper part you saw in the pdf file for easy comparison.
Beside the increased red sensitivity of Foma 400, Kentmere 400 seems to be a bit more sensitive to blue.
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