I wish I can get a tonality like that of the Vivian Maier in #60.
I once shot a roll of modern 35mm 400TX and a roll of Double-X 5222 at the same time, then processed them simultaneously in HC-110. I liked prints from the latter more.
I love her results too. I'm hard pressed to find faults with 1950s Tri-X images when properly focused and exposed in a great camera, and competently developed and printed.
Compare Vivian Maier's 120 image in post #43 with Matt's friend's 4x5 image in post #60. Was the Roger Bannister image cropped and enlarged? What else could explain the difference in quality? Processing?
You don't see modern films as an improvement over old ones, and don't see the need for fine grain films. That's fine, but I have a different viewpoint. You talked about fine grain film driving taste and thus demand in the 1950's and onward toward modern T-grain film, while I think the process was really the opposite.
Are photographers really clamoring for a return to the Tri-X of yore which gave us the print quality from 4x5 shown in the Roger Bannister image in post #43?
Compare Vivian Maier's 120 image in post #43 with Matt's friend's 4x5 image in post #60. Was the Roger Bannister image cropped and enlarged? What else could explain the difference in quality? Processing?
Yes I am nostalgic.
Basically, TMX + Xtol has stripped many of my images from a look that would otherwise make them very appealing.
As soon as I open a photography book from the 80’s and below I drool over the BW images. Wow, those were the days
Difference? "Frankly my dear, I don't give a damn..."
Anyway, it was and is still a good film (although it got a bit costly lately).
Then do not use XTOL and do not use tabular grain films. This is not rocket science.
As soon as I open a photography book from the 80’s and below I drool over the BW images. Wow, those were the days
General Properties: An extremely fast, long-scale film with excellent quality and
moderate contrast, particularly suited for commercial studio work with models or
other subjects requiring short exposures. Tri-X Panchromatic Film gives brilliant
rendering of both highlights and shadows, even with subjects of pronounced
brightness range. It is an ideal material for making color-separation negatives.
Graininess: Allows moderate enlargement without objectionable grain.
Resolving Power: 40 lines per mm. This figure is based on optimum exposure,
subject contrast of 30:1, and recommended development.
...
I also found it interesting that the film is classed as "Panchromatic Type C" which emphasizes yellow/orange, unlike Type B which is a closer match to human vision.
Found this article from 1962:
A Comparison of High-speed
Photographic Films With Different
Vigorous Development Conditions
"Tri-X, including the newly improved Tri-X, is a type B film with slightly higher blue-to-green sensitivity; and at maximum development, it would produce greater density on the weaker oscilloscope traces than Superior 4 film."
The paper talks about older 1959 style Tri-X and the 1960 "improved" Tri-X.
I cannot remember the last time I needed to photograph oscilloscope traces.
Found this article from 1962:
A Comparison of High-speed
Photographic Films With Different
Vigorous Development Conditions
"Tri-X, including the newly improved Tri-X, is a type B film with slightly higher blue-to-green sensitivity; and at maximum development, it would produce greater density on the weaker oscilloscope traces than Superior 4 film."
The paper talks about older 1959 style Tri-X and the 1960 "improved" Tri-X.
I think it would be interesting if Kodak were to re-introduce 2475 recording film that incorporates the more modern technology now found in Tri-X. That would offer a "grainy", higher contrast choice for those who wanted it. T-Max 3200 really doesn't offer that.
I guess I need to pull out some 45-50 year old Tri-X 35mm negatives and print something.
It is. Currently in-stock at B&H, The Film Photography Project, and undoubtedly others. I don't know about Australia-specific availability, though....but given the absurd price of 35mm Tri-X nowadays - I've not seen it in 120 rolls for a long time, is it still available in MF?
"Tri-X, including the newly improved Tri-X, is a type B film with slightly higher blue-to-green sensitivity; and at maximum development, it would produce greater density on the weaker oscilloscope traces than Superior 4 film."
The paper talks about older 1959 style Tri-X and the 1960 "improved" Tri-X.
I cannot remember the last time I needed to photograph oscilloscope traces.
Time machines are fun because they go in both directions. Do I want to go to the future, when Ferrania* introduces a "perfect" film with unlimited latitude, infinitely fine grain at any magnification, with perfect sharpness, which is iso independent, allowing me to print a picture of the moon at 1:1 size with perfect fidelity?do I want to build a time machine to go back to 1966 to buy TriX, well no.
Time machines are fun because they go in both directions. Do I want to go to the future, when Ferrania* introduces a "perfect" film with unlimited latitude, infinitely fine grain at any magnification, with perfect sharpness, which is iso independent, allowing me to print a picture of the moon at 1:1 size with perfect fidelity?
Well, no.
*
Well if they did that, what would we talk about here? Oh, right. Lack of grain.
Yes I am nostalgic.
Basically, TMX + Xtol has stripped many of my images from a look that would otherwise make them very appealing.
As soon as I open a photography book from the 80’s and below I drool over the BW images. Wow, those were the days
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