How many different films do you guys shoot?
Agfa Precisa 100 (Fuji Provia 100F)
Continuing this myth isn't doing anyone any favors!
Continuing this myth isn't doing anyone any favors!
I always thought it was rebranded Provia 100F that didn't make it through quality control. Are you stating it is a different film?
I cannot find any information stating the real emulsion of AgfaPhoto Precisa 100. But a lot of people tested it and compared it to Provia 100F. They saw only very, very little differences. Other sources state it could be Fuji Trebi (a consumer version of Provia 100F?).
I found this table: http://www.fotointern.ch/wp-uploads/2016/03/Tabelle_Hausmarkenfilm_200316.pdf
It states that the current AgfaPhoto Precisa 100 (2010) is Fuji Sensia 100.
All in all, very confusing. We do know it is made in Japan, so it must be Fuji. It could be old stock master rolls, or current made film.
I found this table: http://www.fotointern.ch/wp-uploads/2016/03/Tabelle_Hausmarkenfilm_200316.pdf
It states that the current AgfaPhoto Precisa 100 (2010) is Fuji Sensia 100.
All in all, very confusing. We do know it is made in Japan, so it must be Fuji. It could be old stock master rolls, or current made film.
I think that aspiring photographers should take a look at Darkosaric's gallery and then re-read his comment above.I shoot B&W in 99% of time. Any B&W film is good for me except Foma retro 320 (not for me), also I have no big love for Rollei 80 and Delta 400, but I can use them. Any developer is ok with me as well, I am not picky.
I think that aspiring photographers should take a look at Darkosaric's gallery and then re-read his comment above.
His pictures are beautiful, composed well, and most often tell a story.
It's NOT the film or camera or developer. It's the talent and eye of the photographer that makes the picture.
We all need to spend more time shooting and less pondering the next great film-developer combination. Good pictures start in the hand of the photographer, not in a chemist's beaker.
Sorry to say but I forgot an important issue.I think that aspiring photographers should take a look at Darkosaric's gallery and then re-read his comment above.
His pictures are beautiful, composed well, and most often tell a story.
It's NOT the film or camera or developer. It's the talent and eye of the photographer that makes the picture.
We all need to spend more time shooting and less pondering the next great film-developer combination. Good pictures start in the hand of the photographer, not in a chemist's beaker.
I always thought it was rebranded Provia 100F that didn't make it through quality control. Are you stating it is a different film?
how long do you think you can keep the E100G in the freezer before it goes bad?35mm: Slides: E100G/VS (121 rolls combined, deep-frozen still waiting to be shot)
B&W: Tri-X, HP5+, Delta 3200
C-41: Rarely, but Ektar or Portra if I do...
120: Slides: E100G (91 rolls deep-frozen, still waiting to be shot), Velvia 50
B&W: PanF+, FP4+, TMax100
C-41: Never
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