Film properties at long exposures

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justes

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Jan 19, 2007
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Greetings all,

What knowledge can you masters convey about film (color & B&W) good for long exposures (7s, 9s, longer...). I hear Fuji makes a good color film for long exposures in low light, and I've seen some excellent results, but I can't recall the type. I would welcome notes and advice both general and specific.

Thanks.
 

juan

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You don't mention format, which may make a difference.

I don't know what you mean when you say "good for" - I regularly shoot Efke/Adox PL100 for exposures of longer than 1 second (up to several minutes) with good results. I've taken the trouble to do tests to find proper exposure and development times, as well as reciprocity.

If you mean you want to avoid reciprocity calculations in longer exposures, the T-grain films from Kodak, Fuji and Ilford all have simple adjustments.

If you mean you are looking for a color (colour) film that gives good color rendition in low light, someone else will need to answer that.
juan
 

Konical

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Good Evening, Justes,

Fuji CDU is good for night shots up to several minutes. If you can still locate any well-stored (frozen) Kodak 6121 Duplicating film, you can use it for exposures in the minutes range. Both of these are E-6 tungsten films with low contrast which makes them ideal for night shots.

Konical
 

wirehead

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Apr 13, 2006
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I tend to use Fuji Provia 100F, Velvia 100, and Neopan Acros 100. All of them have spectacular long exposure properties such that you barely need to adjust out to several minutes. The new T64 should be just as good, but I haven't tried it yet. I've done 40 minute exposures with very little color shifting and I do 20 minute exposures on a routine basis.

Most modern T-grain films by Kodak, Ilford, and Fuji are going to be fine out to 10-20 seconds with no adjustments or anything.
 
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justes

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Jan 19, 2007
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Thanks

Thanks indeed. I'll try these out. Enjoy the hour.
 
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