pentaxuser
Member
As the Jones boy from the Valleys used to sing "It's not unusual " on Photrio

pentaxuser
You're right. I've only tested 200 and 400 Foma. But heck, if two out of three examples are confirmed to be way off and downright misleadingly labeled, why would I trust the third? In the case of Foma 200, it was an obvious marketing ploy to give the impression their product was a realistic replacement for Kodak Super-XX. It wasn't. I remember it being marketed as 200 Classic fifty years ago.
the spent ID-11 coming out bright green.
But the negatives are extremely curly, which I do not like, and don't remember being a thing on 135.
The negatives overlap on the side numbering
Yes, I've had experience before with curling negatives, especially with Tri-X on 35mm. The negatives are spending a couple of days under a few heavy photobooks.120 is generally coated on a thinner base. To offset the curling problem, it generally (and Foma 100 certainly) has a back-side gelatin coating as well. Just cut the negatives and store them in appropriate sleeves, weighted down with a book or something. They'll straighten out alright, at least sufficiently so for scanning and printing.
Overlapping negatives is an in-camera transportation problem. I'm not sure what you mean by 'overlap on the side numbering'. If you mean they partly overlay the frame numbers, perhaps your camera's image gate is unusually large and/or there's an alignment problem with your film back. I'm not familiar with the Lubitel cameras, but given their origins and reputation, I think anything is possible (including getting very nice photos from them).
Sounds like a camera issue and a photo of the negatives (you know, the "whole" section of film) woulc probably help with pinpointing the problem.But my issue is not overlapping, the frame spacing is fine, its just that the image is not centered, its farther to the left than it is to the right. I can't think of how it would be the films fault, likely an error on my part but its the first time I have seen it, and I have shot a good few rolls through the Lubitel. Just thought it was interesting.
Lubitels are infamous for their quality check.
Actually, the etymology of the word is āto loveā, āto desireā and while some cameras are largely neglected due to low cost, the well kept Lubitels are pretty decent cameras.[...]
Lubitels are infamous for their quality check. After all, their name means "amateur", kinda speaks for its quality.
Actually, the etymology of the word is āto loveā, āto desireā and while some cameras are largely neglected due to low cost, the well kept Lubitels are pretty decent cameras.
Fomapan 100 is also regarded by many as an amateurish film, but in reality, the film is quite good if you know what you are doing and is capable of stellar results on par with the big three.
Actually, the etymology of the word is āto loveā, āto desireā and while some cameras are largely neglected due to low cost, the well kept Lubitels are pretty decent cameras.
Fomapan 100 is also regarded by many as an amateurish film, but in reality, the film is quite good if you know what you are doing and is capable of stellar results on par with the big three.
Wrong. "Lubit" is "to love", "Lubitel" is "amateur".
Alright, but would you say it's possible that the etymology of 'lubitel' goes through 'lubit', in that sense mirroring the etymology of the Western (French) 'amateur', which also happens to trace to the verb 'to love'?
Foma 400 in 120 used to curl but I find that it hasn't for years. I find Fomapan 100 at box speed is fine developed with D76 stock. Though I suspect Kentmere is a little better, I've shot more of the Foma than Kentmere.
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