Choosing between Ilford XP2 Super and Kodak BW 400cn, which of these two films will provide the most detail (shadows and highlights)on either side of middle- tone? Perhaps I should say "exposure latitude" or "contrast range".
I would like to use one of these films for "available light" night photography of old buildings lit by street lights plus foot bridges in parks also lit by street lights.
From reading, it would appear that the Kodak 400cn is Less affected by reciprocity than the Ilford XP2. Do you find this to be true?
Many thanks,
Sam H.
I am not sure about which has a better reciprocity, they use the same process, but actually serve different purposes.
XP2 Super, after processing looks like pretty much any other B&W film,slightly pinkish IIRC, but can easily be printed using conventional B&W paper. XP2 super when printed on an optical RA4 compatible colour paper printer will have a colour cast, some scanner based colour printers will recognize XP2 Super and compensate for the colour cast. A Pro lab might have this, the local Wally World will not.
BW400CN looks like any C41 colour film with the orange background, this means that prints that come from a minilab, and printed on an optical RA4 compatible colour paper will not have a colour cast, the prints will appear black and white, even printed on colour paper. It's very difficult to get a decent print from it using a conventional black and white paper, the contrast is low, negatives are very dense and the orange mask may affect the contrast range on multigrade papers.
I would say use XP2 if you have a predominantly B&W process and want to be able to get the negatives processed without needing to use the darkroom. For example if your travelling for a while and don't want to risk latent images, especially useful if flying.
I would say use BW400CN if you gave a predominantly analogue colour process and want to shoot an occasional roll of B&W, for something special.
If you have a predominantly B&W process, there are better B&W process films out there for very low light use, like Delta 3200 and TMax 3200.