markbarendt
Member
Well said Norman
this guy needs an ABC to start experimenting
1) There are 2 kinds of film: traditional (old, classic) grain, and T-grain (T from thin). Traditional grain films render more contrast, more black and white and less midtones, due to their single layer coarser grain. I usually compare their tonality with B-series pencils (in extremis charcoal). The classics in this group are: Pan-F, Tri-X, FP4+, HP5+. On the other side, T-grain films render more midtones and less pure black and white, otherwise said more pastels, do to their multi (2~3) layer finer grain. I compare their tonality to the H-series pencils (in extremis metallic tones). The classics in this group are: T-Max and Delta series.
3) You also have to experiment with the two film groups in different shooting situations and for different themes. What will you chose for portraits, for landscape, townscape, foggy mornings, cloudy days, etc.? Try to guess the mood youll like to get in the print, than chose the film and developer, the lens filter, to pull or to push, etc. I suggest you to have two cameras with you, loaded each with a type of film (classic and T-grain), and shot the same image with both. Compare later and chose the one that is more consistent with what you expected. Learn and stick with it (at least for 2-3 years).
4) Finally for this ABC, keep in mind a basic rule: the smaller the print, the higher the contrast, and the larger the print, the smaller the contrast. Do the opposite and people will treat you for a tourist theres not much place for experiments here. And this rule is also consistent with the size of the grain: larger grain for smaller prints and smaller grain for larger prints. Considering the size of the final print, you should chose the right film: classic grain for smaller prints (I would say up to 11x14 and exceptionally 12x16), and T-grain for prints starting at 11x14 and going up to a wall size).
... Yes it is, but it is work that everyone should do at least once!
... Overall, I am simply anti-recipe. Recipes are helpful suggestions, but consider the possibility that all of us used the same recipes. ....
3. I forgot about the film part, and learned to SEE, which is infinitely more important than what film you use.
...
- Thomas
But if you don't have *ANY* idea what you want to start with, you might very well go to a local "Taste of the local town" even and sample scores of things, Greek, Italian, French, Middle Eastern, desserts, pasta, who knows what. This, I think, is the very, very beginning stage where one just might need to try a whole bunch of things. But once you decide, "I'm going to learn to bake bread," then you've got your work cut out for you. (I know one guy who's spent 50 years with bread, so it ain't all that easy if you get really deep into it.) But when you start trying to bake bread, then you probably need to decide one type of bread and stick with it a few times rather than trying to put sourdough, yeast read, and soda quick bread all in the same oven hoping to figure out what's happening with all of them simultaneously.
...I need a quality low ASA and a quality high ASA. So I've been thinking Pan-F for the low, but what about the high? ...I'm thinking I do not need anything higher than 400 ASA.
...But who makes T-Max and Delta?
Now, from what I'm reading elsewhere, Pan-F has the finest grain there is. And you would say that makes a better smaller print candidate because T-grain is more midtone, right? You're not talking at all about the grain size.. ?
the classic grain, with its 3D like crystals, will create small half-darkened areas around the grains, lowering the acutance (the definition of the edge between light and shadow). This doesnt create half-tones as expected, just the feeling...... This is why, the classic grain can provide deep blacks and textured half-tones (instead of continuous grays), which also increases the contrast, while lowering the acutance.
On the other hand, the T-grain, with its 2D like crystals, will create far less half-darkened areas around grains when shooting, even wide-open. This increases the acutance, while the half-tones are created through superposition of more or less of the flat grains. The feeling is that the T-grain film provides very reach and continuous (not powder-like, less textured) gray tones, with higher acutance, but also lower contrast.
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