snusmumriken
Subscriber
I personally detest the current trend of taking older classic work and blowing it up like a billboard. And it's a downright silly to state that one didn't "notice grain" at a 50X enlargement. Heck, at that size the whole thing is downright mush anyway if you view it up close. All it is, is a billboard, intended for a "normal viewing distance" of a quarter mile away, going past it at 70mph. What the heck does that prove?
With respect, I suggest it proves that if you view a good photo at such a distance that you can appreciate the whole composition, graininess is not a distraction; and that if you move in closer you shouldn't be surprised if you see grain. You can't easily dismiss a large print as a 'billboard': it is designed for particular viewing conditions, as is a contact print from a 10"x8" neg, or a projected colour slide, or an online image.
FP4 has been around since 1955. I took the picture posted above ("Duck killed by falling apples") about 30 years ago with some memorable Ilford advertising of the 1960s in mind - and because I happened to have a dead duck.

But of course there are many ways to make beautiful photographs. (And fresh ways are constantly being discovered to make bad ones.)
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