• Welcome to Photrio!
    Registration is fast and free. Join today to unlock search, see fewer ads, and access all forum features.
    Click here to sign up

FP4 Plus at ISO 800

Rainy Day Trees

A
Rainy Day Trees

  • 4
  • 0
  • 55
One Way

A
One Way

  • 1
  • 1
  • 52

Forum statistics

Threads
203,151
Messages
2,850,608
Members
101,700
Latest member
Cpeason301
Recent bookmarks
1

Palantiri7

Member
Allowing Ads
Joined
Jan 11, 2006
Messages
131
Format
Large Format
Happy New Year everybody!

In the, um, unlikely event that someone may be interested, I just tried out 120 FP4 Plus rated at ISO 800. The picture was taken in dim window light, and I stand developed the film in HC-110 dil. B for 20 minutes at 20 degrees C. I agitated for the first minute. The film was scanned in RGB, and inverted in Photoshop. I used the blue channel, and tossed the red and the green. I must say that the negs turned out quite well, and were easy to scan. So, I'm happy I can uprate FP4 in an emergency and be happy!

Cheers,

Rory
 

Attachments

  • Rollei6003_31122008_02_w2.jpg
    Rollei6003_31122008_02_w2.jpg
    71 KB · Views: 361
Happy New Year everybody!

In the, um, unlikely event that someone may be interested, I just tried out 120 FP4 Plus rated at ISO 800. The picture was taken in dim window light, and I stand developed the film in HC-110 dil. B for 20 minutes at 20 degrees C. I agitated for the first minute. The film was scanned in RGB, and inverted in Photoshop. I used the blue channel, and tossed the red and the green. I must say that the negs turned out quite well, and were easy to scan. So, I'm happy I can uprate FP4 in an emergency and be happy!

Cheers,

Rory

This is definitely something to keep in mind.... I wonder if Δ 100 would let you get away with that trick?????
 
I'm impressed, just cut and pasted your post into notepad :smile:
thanks for the lesson!
 
Curious about the agitation, what would have happened if you followed a "normal agitation routine ? more grain?
 
Thnx everybody. Yeah bspeed, I get grainy FP4 when I agitate normally with HC-110. Also, Thomas Bertilsson explains really well why it may be better to stand develop when pushing a film in this thread:

(there was a url link here which no longer exists)

Thanks Thomas!
 
The negatives look fine for printing IMO. :wink:
 
Yeah, could you print it and then scan it for us? I'm impressed by the film scan, but I'm really curious as to what grade it would print on.
 
As per request:

Scan of print made on Multigrade Warmtone RC, developed in Fotospeed warmtone developer. Settings on dichroic head - 25 magenta, 80 yellow (I normally set this to about 49 magenta, 50 yellow for my normally exposed negatives).
 

Attachments

  • Rollei6003_31122008_02_w3.jpg
    Rollei6003_31122008_02_w3.jpg
    60.6 KB · Views: 192
The scanned negative looks slightly better than the scanned print. Not as harsh. But pretty darn impressive for being underexposed by 3 stops.
 
Ya, I should have backed off the magenta filtration a bit. Ah well.
 
Nice results!

Why don't you tell us the specifics of how you metered, and let us know some key densitometer readings? Methinks this may not be as miraculous as it seems, and once the info is made clear, will boil down to a "mistake" in metering technique that happened to work in your favor. Results that nice from any film underexposed three stops is a fluke, plain and simple.

Not that it isn't a great pic of a great fuzzy kitty!
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Happy New Year everybody!

In the, um, unlikely event that someone may be interested, I just tried out 120 FP4 Plus rated at ISO 800. The picture was taken in dim window light, and I stand developed the film in HC-110 dil. B for 20 minutes at 20 degrees C. I agitated for the first minute. The film was scanned in RGB, and inverted in Photoshop. I used the blue channel, and tossed the red and the green. I must say that the negs turned out quite well, and were easy to scan. So, I'm happy I can uprate FP4 in an emergency and be happy!
Thanks for this... I happened to be wandering around the British Museum late Friday night (not a planned photo trip - just had a couple of hours to kill before meeting some family for evening drinks) and didn't have any fast film on me; remembering this thread I thought I'd give this a go!

With a bit of luck I'll find time to develop the roll this afternoon; I'll post the results...
 
I hope it works out, Tim. Hi 2F/2F, yes, I've been thinking 'fluke' myself. I will try another roll. I used simple center-weighted metering on a Rollei 6003 SRC 1000, which has a pretty good meter. I'm embarrassed to report that I don't own a densitometer, so I am very sorry I can't offer any useful information there. Forgive me! :sad:
 
Thanks kindly for the apug thread link! I have 3 4x5 negatives of that film I exposed for 400iso, will give your method a try.
 
I hope it works out, Tim.
Well, test roll is hanging up to dry at the moment. First impressions are positive - there's a full range of densities in any event...

I'll see if I'm in a fit state to try scanning some when I get back from the pub tonight.
 
Joy!! Thanks for that Tim; I started to get scared that this might have been a one-hit wonder. Ooh, scanning while inebriated! That must be more fun than my staring at the scanner while I'm sober.
 
Joy!! Thanks for that Tim; I started to get scared that this might have been a one-hit wonder. Ooh, scanning while inebriated! That must be more fun than my staring at the scanner while I'm sober.
Well, excuse the dust/scratches - this is the first roll I've developed since moving home and I'll be blowed if I can find my blower brush (and I've decided my experimental squeegeeing - 'cos the water round here is terrible - was an error) - but here are a couple more or less straight from the scanner. These are just straight scanned in B&W mode, with a tiny curve tweak on the first and absolutely nothing done on the second.


I don't claim these as great photos by the way :wink:. They're literally just a couple grabbed straight from the first strip - now I really must get me down to the pub or the wife is going to kill me...

35mm FP4+, pushed to 800 and stand dev'd for 20 minutes at 20C, agitating for first 60 seconds:
 

Attachments

  • BrMuseum-FP4-Push800-R094-01.jpg
    BrMuseum-FP4-Push800-R094-01.jpg
    126.7 KB · Views: 150
  • BrMuseum-FP4-Push800-R094-02.jpg
    BrMuseum-FP4-Push800-R094-02.jpg
    150.2 KB · Views: 135
This summer I shot FP4 @ 1000 , D100 @800 and D100 @1000. Both films do work. I think that they behave better in daylight than incandescent light. I suspect the spectral sensitivity.

3 stop push has its caveats - that means virtually no shadow detail and high risk of underexposure especially when using centre-weighted metering. My success rate is that of D3200 @ 3200 or 6400.

What surprises me is that anyone is surprised that it works or suspect its a fluke. Why is that?
 
Photrio.com contains affiliate links to products. We may receive a commission for purchases made through these links.
To read our full affiliate disclosure statement please click Here.

PHOTRIO PARTNERS EQUALLY FUNDING OUR COMMUNITY:



Ilford ADOX Freestyle Photographic Stearman Press Weldon Color Lab Blue Moon Camera & Machine
Top Bottom