So, I've decided that the best way for me to find a film I like is to compare them.
I took two identical images on 4"x5" FP4+ and Tri-X. I developed both in HC-110 B.
Looking at them I think:
FP4+ is sharper
FP4+ has more visible grain. Tri-X may have more grain, but it's smoother. Neither have visible grain at reasonable print sizes (20"x16" print simulated on my monitor looks fantastic.)
Comparing histograms from scanned negatives:
FP4+ appears to have more contrast in the shadows, midtones and highlights. This is easily apparent when printed, Tri-X looks almost washed out.
Basically, I think that apart from the visible grain, FP4+ wins on all categories. Perhaps it's my choice of developer. I think with clever printing in the darkroom I can make the Tri-X negative as contrasty as the FP4+ negative, which I prefer. The difference becomes one of sharpness, and FP4+ wins.
So, for me, I'm happier with FP4+ over Tri-X.
My question is have I performed a fair comparison? Should I have used a different developer, for example? My EI and dev times are perhaps not as scientific as they could be, but they do give me negatives with blacks that print to black and highlights that are as restrained as I'd like.
Thanks in advance.
Martin
You can spend a lot of time and money on picking films and developers
(you did not control for gamma did you?)
Try again using 1:100 for the HC110. Use dev time x 4 (dil b), and agitate less (1 every 2-3 mins). I normally use this for stand, but medium and high formats need more agitation. You will find the grain will lower and detail will leap out on both, but I predict the FP4+ will shine more.
I would probably compare FP4+ to Plus-X considering they are the same speed, or HP5+ to Tri-X. I would really probably do a 4 way comparison, of FP4, Delta 100, Plus-X and TMax 100 to see which I like best as a 100 class film, then compare HP5, Tri-X, Delta 100 and Delta 400 to see which I like best as a 400 class film.
Then you need to see what speed you prefer, for the films you prefer, some people find that the like one film at one speed, but another at a different speed. Then what developer you prefer.
You can spend a lot of time and money on picking films and developers, which is why many people pick 2 or 3 films and one or two developers, and that they use for everything.
Try again using 1:100 for the HC110. Use dev time x 4 (dil b), and agitate less (1 every 2-3 mins). I normally use this for stand, but medium and high formats need more agitation. You will find the grain will lower and detail will leap out on both, but I predict the FP4+ will shine more.
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