DREW WILEY
Member
- Joined
- Jul 14, 2011
- Messages
- 13,991
- Format
- 8x10 Format
Quality-control wise, it's way behind Kodak, Fuji, or Ilford. The tonality is unique; so I understand the appeal of this film. But shooting it in large format was risky, though some of the flaws probably wouldn't show up on a contact print. The most common problem was very fine long linear scratches parallel to the long side, about half an inch in. That makes me suspect it was related to how the transport transpired during either cutting or packaging. That's not the kind of pattern than might accidentally happen during processing. This would not likely show up on small film. But it's also a lot easier to snap a spare shot with 35mm than 8x10. This film has actually been around quite awhile, clear back when some Super-XX was still around in sheets, along with Bergger 200. You could even tell from the cut edges that Foma was using a lower quality method. I'd be happy to try the film again if serious 8x10 users gave it a bill of health. That's an expensive ballgame,
and I don't want any unwanted surprises again!
and I don't want any unwanted surprises again!