I have called Fotokemika yesterday again - it looks like film is going down also
AS far as the post about wanting to use a ND filter on a huge lens. Would sugest using the Movie Maker method. Big lens hood with a slot for a flat glass filter (and then another hood forward to keep the sun of the filter.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matte_box
...There were 6 machines in 3 rooms with 4 operational at any one time. The other two were undergoing refit and cleaning. Of course, these were the most modern. There were also other coating machines. There were two separate buildings devoted to film.
Just curious, but why do you need such a slow film in sheets? The reason for tolerating a very slow film, for me, was to get very fine grain. I don't need that when a 16x20 is only a 4x enlargement. TMX has finer grain than Pan X did, not with the same look granted, but finer grain.
I am sorry if I was not plain enough in my answer. ISO 100 film is too fast. Specifically, lets consider this lens:
View attachment 55217
The 250mm f2.0 Zuiko. Maximum aperture is f2.0.
By using a wide open aperture, you keep depth of field shallow and allow the background to disappear into a blur. As I mentioned, this issue is aperture driven. Not everyone wants to have everything in the frame razor sharp. And no, these lenses were not just for low light. From The OM System Lens Handbook (1983) Page 150: ....
I understand. Believe me, I understand "I like Efke films and nothing else has the same look." What I didn't understand was needing specifically SLOW films in sheets. My fastest 4x5 lens is f/4.7 and that's fast for LF. My other two are 6.8 and 7.7, with the latter being a 203 Ektar, and the one most likely to be used for portraits where I might shoot near wide open. (I love that little lens.) It starts out nearly f/8 and add even a yellow filter, and the fact I don't shoot in bright sun...
I understand loving a film that's going away, believe me. (I found E100G after Astia was axed and then Kodak took it too) I was just questioning needing a specifically very slow film for large format. Thought I concede some people may.
What do you mean by "full size?"
While we are on the topic I have a few film questions. .... The handwriting was on the wall for E-6 for some time. Now that Kodak is no longer making slide film maybe Fuji, at the new higher prices, can make it a while longer. When a 36 exp. roll of Portra 800 sells for more than $10 I have to wonder how much longer it will be around. I can see a time when all of my film cameras will only have b&w to shoot with and all color work will be digital. Does anyone know whether Agfa-Gevaert is still coating film? What ever became of the Foto-Impex project to coat b&w films similer to APX 100 and 400 using old machinery from Agfaphoto?
Provia and Velvia are not significantly more expensive than professional negative films, at lest not Portra and Ektar. I just checked Freestyle and Provia is actually slightly less than Portra. There are no cheap amateur slide films from Fuji anymore though. The death of slide film is due to vast improvement in negative film and consumer preference, not price.
Why is this in the Fotokemika thread which has nothing whatsoever to go with color materials?
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