I'm not sure I know what a "vintage" look is, really; there are so many variables attributable to so many different aspects of the process. Grain itself looks "vintage" to some people, as contrasted with the grainless look for which a lot of t-grain users strive. So do empty shadows, sometimes. But if you really want viewers to go "OMG V1NT4G3!!1!" about a photo, sepia-tone it and put it in a gilt frame...
-NT
I'm sure this has been asked alot but I can't find anything on it. I'd like to try out Foma and want to know how their film behaves before buying the film. I've heard the 400 is more of a 200 and the same type of things about the 200 and 100. I'd also like to know what to expect for contrast, latitude, grain, etc.
Also is there one of the three that would be recommended over the others? I would prefer to buy 20 or 30 boxes of one of the three to get a feel for it and get good results. I will be shooting 120 or 35mm.
Thanks in advance,
John
I'm sure this has been asked alot but I can't find anything on it. I'd like to try out Foma and want to know how their film behaves before buying the film. I've heard the 400 is more of a 200 and the same type of things about the 200 and 100. I'd also like to know what to expect for contrast, latitude, grain, etc.
Also is there one of the three that would be recommended over the others? I would prefer to buy 20 or 30 boxes of one of the three to get a feel for it and get good results. I will be shooting 120 or 35mm.
Thanks in advance,
John
... They may not give as high a contrast when exposed and processed according to box instructions, but folks who do alternative process work love them for printing because they build contrast so easily through manipulated development. ....
The "vintage" look comes from the fact that the films are not true panchromatic but more ortho-panchromatic (they're not as red sensitive as say Tri-X or FP4+), so they give a look more like old-school emulsions from the 40s and 50s. They may not give as high a contrast when exposed and processed according to box instructions, but folks who do alternative process work love them for printing because they build contrast so easily through manipulated development. I love the Fomapan 200 in 5x7 - at that negative size, grain is non-existent, and they make beautiful platinum prints. I typically rate the 200 at 100 to improve shadow detail.
Could you tell me what you mean with: "they build contrast so easily through manipulated development."
Until now I used digital negatives for (learning) the alt-processes like Bromoil, salt printing, gum printing, carbon printing and albumen printing.
I want to start making "real" analogue negatives from now on, so this is interesting.I have an old Russian FKD plate camera (18x24 cm) and several 5x7" film sheet cassettes (but no 5x7" camera yet) for making these negatives.
(please PM if too much off topic, thank you)
.... But if you really want viewers to go "OMG V1NT4G3!!1!" ...
-NT
Second tier manufactures like Foma do not have the best reputations for quality control.
A good way to see images shot on a particular film is to search that film on Flickr.
To my taste, Fomapan 100 is pretty grainy for routine use in 35mm, but fine in larger formats.
My experience with Fomapan 100 is limited to two 35mm rolls which I developed in XTOL 1+1 to a CI of ca. 0.65 in 2009.
The grain in the prints was visibly finer than that of ACROS in the same developer.
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