Here is 35mm Plus-X in replenished X-Tol:
Closest I've got is a 6x4.5 Plus-X negative in replenished HC-110 dil E
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So many opinions expressed in this thread. Without any supporting evidence, image or technical data. Except from Matt King.FP4 is somewhat "old school" in that it will readily compress highlights,
So we have 14 f-stops of clean, straight curve. Compressed highlights...About the curve
The X-axis shows the density of film. The Y-axis shows the exposure, one step is 1/2 f-stop.
The blue straight curve start with the sensitivity point (D-max 0.1) and ends at D-max 1.3 over 7 f-stops. This is the part of the curve that are used printing on normal grade photographic paper. More information in the text block about test procedure.
Correct. I missed that it was a quotation.I didn't say what you quoted as my words...
As an aside, a search on photrio with "muddy" by user "2F/2F" results in 17 hitsI should have been more clear. By compressed highlights, I am speaking mostly of something you see in printing (usually when burning in). I meant things that are beyond the point of detail and texture – paper base white and just before it, and things that land on the negative much beyond this. When they are burned down, there is not nearly as much tonal separation and detail as there is with a film like T-max.
I have many years of experience with FP4 in D-76 1+1. But none with perceptol, so I cannot answer your question. And, what is "better" is to some extent a personal matter, apart from statistical studies conducted by Eastman Kodak long ago.How would you answer my question about differences between D-76 and Perceptol for current FP4+?
It seems Perceptol does a better job than ID-11/D-76 for 35mm FP4+.
No, Lachlan, it's not because of that image.All you can tell from that image is about how poor the MTF of that scan is, nothing more - it's nowhere near good enough to make judgments about the relative sharpness/ granularity properties of Perceptol and ID-11/ D-76.
Hello Drew, great points and explanations.FP4 has a bit more toe than TMax films; so for all practical purposes is a full stop slower if you need the full contrast range on the straight line portion of the curve. Therefore I routinely expose FP4 at 50, but TMX at box speed of 100. TMax digs deeper down into the shadows to begin with, so doesn't need the extra exposure boost way down there.
As far as developers go, D76 and Perceptol give similar curve shapes, with a slight sag in the middle. The visual difference in a print is minimal. Perceptol gives more distinct grain at 1:3 than 1:1; but with FP4 the difference in acutance will be minor. But I'd stick with 1:1 for anything small like 35mm or 120 film to keep grain size per se down.
At box speed in D-76 it's the well known grainy FP4+, with grain that's not too far from the grain of HP5+
Therefore I routinely expose FP4 at 50, but TMX at box speed of 100. TMax digs deeper down into the shadows to begin with, so doesn't need the extra exposure boost way down there
To give an opinion would require real comparative tests, i.e. select 2-3 representative (for me) scenes (low/high dynamic range), photograph them in parallel (same time, same lighting) with "N" cameras, develop in the "N" developers under consideration, print, blind test (ID on reverse side of print). And then comes the role of the printing stage. And, one needs to define "preferred", or "best"? Sharpness? smoothness of grain? (For me tonality comes first)Thanks!
Is D-76 1+1 your preferred development for current FP4+ ?
It would really take a stretch to get FP4 graininess as high as HP5. Even way back when I was using 76, and as a beginner, was badly overexposing and overdeveloping FP4 sheets, they never came anywhere near close to HP5 in granularity.
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