Captain_joe6
Member
Much as the title says, I'm wondering wether early 'panchromatic' films were truly panchromatic, having what we now call 'normal' red sensativity, or if they were orthopanchromatic, having only limited red sensativity. It would make sense to me that they were the latter, and that red sensativity increased over the years with technological advances.
The reason I ask is because I want to produce a series of photographs that have a distinctly early-20th century look to them, somewhat in the vein of Edward Weston, Edward Steichen, and Alfred Stieglitz. I'm tempted to go with something from Efke's lineup, partly because of the vintage of the emulsion formulas, partly price, and partly because the one roll of KB25 I shot seemed decent enough to warrant further experimentation. I'll be shooting 8x10 and developing in a pyro developer of some sort, so obviously if you've got any suggestions for films, they've got to be available in that size and compatible with staining developers. So, before I go spending the bucks on a box of film, tell me: which film(s) and developer(s) should I be looking at?
Thanks all,
Patrick
The reason I ask is because I want to produce a series of photographs that have a distinctly early-20th century look to them, somewhat in the vein of Edward Weston, Edward Steichen, and Alfred Stieglitz. I'm tempted to go with something from Efke's lineup, partly because of the vintage of the emulsion formulas, partly price, and partly because the one roll of KB25 I shot seemed decent enough to warrant further experimentation. I'll be shooting 8x10 and developing in a pyro developer of some sort, so obviously if you've got any suggestions for films, they've got to be available in that size and compatible with staining developers. So, before I go spending the bucks on a box of film, tell me: which film(s) and developer(s) should I be looking at?
Thanks all,
Patrick