How to shoot Ilford SFX 200 the most effectively?

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Helge

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Thank you. I’ve been reading more about the Rollei 400 IR and it seems most people prefer it over the Ilford SFX. I’ve ordered some and am looking forward to using it.

If I’m using the film unfiltered, I rate it at 160 ISO and when using the IR72 filter, I rate at 10 ISO, is that correct? I’d normally meter for the shadows and develop for the highlights, does this still apply with IR film?

No, that will probably result in blown highlights.
Metering with a normal light meter is hard because IR exposure depends on something largely invisible to the meter.

Shade on a sunny day and shade on a cloudy day, resulting in the same exposure reading, will have quite different amounts of IR.

Use the meter for the whole scene, then subtract stops for how cloudy it is, or how deep the shade is.

For open sun I usually use the metering with no correction.
For a cloud across the sun, I subtract one or two stops.
In overcast weather it might be as much as three or four stops.
A powerful flash is actually helpful under such circumstances.
In a summer sunlit forrest there is a surprising amount of IR. Probably because the leaves diffuse and reflect IR. So you need only about one stop of compensation.

See where this leads?
It’s very much a matter of experiments and experience. Both with the film but also with your camera.
And always with important shots: Bracket.
 
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Sirius Glass

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Thank you for the info. Would the same apply to Rollei Infrared 400 (except the ISO rating). Just seen the price of Ilford SFX in the UK and it’s nearly twice the price of Rollei Infrared. Think I might try the Rollei first to experiment.

I prefer IR400, but it’s not 400. Closer to 160 probably. But the rating with a 720 filter is about the same. IE 10. Plenty fast for handheld in full sun.
It’s contrastier and finer grained than SFX.
Use a 40.5mm filter in the hood.
This is probably good: https://www.ebay.com/itm/4038950455...De7EmQ6S-q&var=&widget_ver=artemis&media=COPY
Never had problems with Chinese IR filters.

Thank you. I’ve been reading more about the Rollei 400 IR and it seems most people prefer it over the Ilford SFX. I’ve ordered some and am looking forward to using it.

If I’m using the film unfiltered, I rate it at 160 ISO and when using the IR72 filter, I rate at 10 ISO, is that correct? I’d normally meter for the shadows and develop for the highlights, does this still apply with IR film?

I strongly prefer Rollei Infrared 400 over Ilford SPF. With Rollei Infrared 400 is can get interesting differences between Red23, Red 25, Red 29 and 720.
 

Andrew O'Neill

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I strongly prefer Rollei Infrared 400 over Ilford SPF. With Rollei Infrared 400 is can get interesting differences between Red23, Red 25, Red 29 and 720.

...and Rollei IR is available in 4x5 😁 which is one reason why I choose it over SFX.
 

MattKing

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If I’m using the film unfiltered, I rate it at 160 ISO and when using the IR72 filter, I rate at 10 ISO, is that correct?

This is probably correct, but I always find it more helpful to say something like "I rate the film at 160, but when using an R72 filter, I meter the subject at an EI of 10, to take into account a four stop filter factor".
 

pentaxuser

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Use the meter for the whole scene, then subtract stops for how cloudy it is, or how deep the shade is.

For open sun I usually use the metering with no correction.
For a cloud across the sun, I subtract one or two stops.
In overcast weather it might be as much as three or four stops.
A powerful flash is actually helpful under such circumstances.
In a summer sunlit forrest there is a surprising amount of IR. Probably because the leaves diffuse and reflect IR. So you need only about one stop of compensation.

Can I ask. Is this metering without taking into consideration the necessary IR 72 filter or is this metering through the IR filter and then applying your rules shown above?

What kind of ISO do you use in each of the above situations with Rollei 400 IR film?

Thanks

pentaxuser
 

Helge

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Can I ask. Is this metering without taking into consideration the necessary IR 72 filter or is this metering through the IR filter and then applying your rules shown above?

What kind of ISO do you use in each of the above situations with Rollei 400 IR film?

Thanks

pentaxuser

While you can meter through the filter it would take a lot of experience to know how to interpret it. And be fiddly and slow unless you have two filters on hand.

Newer in-camera meters actually seem to meter well through a filter. The N/F80 for example produces nice results and even AF worked. But of
course the finder was black.

As mentioned a real IR meter would be nice though.

I use the EI 10 rating as a baseline and meter for the ground or incident metering.

The Aviphot emulsions (200 and 80 sold under among others the Rollei and Adox brands) have a relatively narrow exposure window (but wonderful tonal separation superior to other sensors including human vision) so don’t think you can just overexpose to be safe. Try to nail it, which is not that hard.
 
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Sirius Glass

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Can I ask. Is this metering without taking into consideration the necessary IR 72 filter or is this metering through the IR filter and then applying your rules shown above?

What kind of ISO do you use in each of the above situations with Rollei 400 IR film?

Thanks

pentaxuser

Meter at ISO 400, adjust 5 f/stops for the 720 aka 72 filter.
 

Helge

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Meter at ISO 400, adjust 5 f/stops for the 720 aka 72 filter.

It’s not that simple. The response is rising after 700nm, where it drops of a cliff after 740.
And the 400 rating is pure fiction. You can push it that far, but it gets very contrasty.
 

pentaxuser

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It’s not that simple. The response is rising after 700nm, where it drops of a cliff after 740.
And the 400 rating is pure fiction. You can push it that far, but it gets very contrasty.

Well Sirius's method gets him to 12 with a 400 film or 6 with a 200 which isn't much different to your baseline of 10 is it?

pentaxuser
 

Helge

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Well Sirius's method gets him to 12 with a 400 film or 6 with a 200 which isn't much different to your baseline of 10 is it?

pentaxuser
If your bracket with temperamental film like this, you might be out of luck. And the nice thing about super panchromatic film such as AviPhot, is that you can remove the infrared filter and shoot “naked”, or with another filter without thinking about it, only adjusting the meter. For that you need the correct rating.
And you will of course also need it when you develop.
 

pentaxuser

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So, Helge with your baseline of 10 can you describe what you do in the scenarios you mention in #76 as follows:

For open sun I usually use the metering with no correction.
For a cloud across the sun, I subtract one or two stops.
In overcast weather it might be as much as three or four stops.
A powerful flash is actually helpful under such circumstances.
In a summer sunlit forrest there is a surprising amount of IR. Probably because the leaves diffuse and reflect IR. So you need only about one stop of compensation.

Can you also say what a powerful flash does. Yes it lights up the immediate foreground but that helps only the immediate and presumably shady few feet or is this for a scene in which there is only an immediate foreground which has a lot of IR producing material?

Thanks

pentaxuser
 

Sirius Glass

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Meter at ISO 400, adjust 5 f/stops for the 720 aka 72 filter.

It’s not that simple. The response is rising after 700nm, where it drops of a cliff after 740.
And the 400 rating is pure fiction. You can push it that far, but it gets very contrasty.

Yes, it is but it has only been working for me for over five years. Maybe after another five years it will stop working, you think?

Well Sirius's method gets him to 12 with a 400 film or 6 with a 200 which isn't much different to your baseline of 10 is it?

pentaxuser

But it consistently working.
 

Helge

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So, Helge with your baseline of 10 can you describe what you do in the scenarios you mention in #76 as follows:

For open sun I usually use the metering with no correction.
For a cloud across the sun, I subtract one or two stops.
In overcast weather it might be as much as three or four stops.
A powerful flash is actually helpful under such circumstances.
In a summer sunlit forrest there is a surprising amount of IR. Probably because the leaves diffuse and reflect IR. So you need only about one stop of compensation.

Can you also say what a powerful flash does. Yes it lights up the immediate foreground but that helps only the immediate and presumably shady few feet or is this for a scene in which there is only an immediate foreground which has a lot of IR producing material?

Thanks

pentaxuser

The flash is of course to light up foreground if it’s on camera flash. Can be useful in the shade and for pure effect.
But I have tried crazy stuff like bringing all my nine Cactus V5 triggers to the park with V285s on each.
That sure creates some interesting effects. But you probably need an assistant to watch the equipment, time to set it up and of course clear intent.
 

Helge

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Yes, it is but it has only been working for me for over five years. Maybe after another five years it will stop working, you think?



But it consistently working.

There is working and there is Working™.
You can arrive at good enough results often, but it’s always good to know how and why.
 

Sirius Glass

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There is working and there is Working™.
You can arrive at good enough results often, but it’s always good to know how and why.

I would not recommend anything that does not work, work well and work consistently.
 

super_claret

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OK, so there seems to be a difference of opinion and it’s very confusing for the beginner😀

Just to recap… if the box speed is more like 160, not 400 and I use an IR72 filter, which needs an extra 5 stops, my calculations would be to set my handheld meter to 5 ISO? I don’t have TTL metering, as I’m using a Fuji GF670W rangefinder.

I’ve also got used to metering for the shadows and placing them on zone 3 and with high contrast scenes, reducing the dev time. If this method doesn’t work, how can I capture a high contrast image without blowing the highlights or blocking up up the shadows?
 

MattKing

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OK, so there seems to be a difference of opinion and it’s very confusing for the beginner😀

Just to recap… if the box speed is more like 160, not 400 and I use an IR72 filter, which needs an extra 5 stops, my calculations would be to set my handheld meter to 5 ISO? I don’t have TTL metering, as I’m using a Fuji GF670W rangefinder.

I’ve also got used to metering for the shadows and placing them on zone 3 and with high contrast scenes, reducing the dev time. If this method doesn’t work, how can I capture a high contrast image without blowing the highlights or blocking up up the shadows?

As for the exposure, that sounds workable, but it is always a good idea to bracket because the truth of the matter is that your meter doesn't actually read the same light you are recording on the film - it reads the light within the visible spectrum that accompanies the near-infrared light the filter is passing.
And the ratio of near-infrared to to visible varies due to a bunch of factors that are hard to measure or control - things like how much the foliage in your subject is reflecting near-infrared.
Using these films involves a certain amount of experience based educated guessing. That is part of the fun!
As for "contrast", I think your concern is probably better referred to as Subject Luminance Range - how "bright" the highlights are, vs. how "dark" the shadows are. You may notice that "bright" and "dark" are in quotes here, because it isn't how "bright" or "dark" they look, but rather how much or how little near-infrared light is reflecting off those parts of the subject, something that neither our eyes or our meters can see.
 

Helge

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OK, so there seems to be a difference of opinion and it’s very confusing for the beginner😀

Just to recap… if the box speed is more like 160, not 400 and I use an IR72 filter, which needs an extra 5 stops, my calculations would be to set my handheld meter to 5 ISO? I don’t have TTL metering, as I’m using a Fuji GF670W rangefinder.

I’ve also got used to metering for the shadows and placing them on zone 3 and with high contrast scenes, reducing the dev time. If this method doesn’t work, how can I capture a high contrast image without blowing the highlights or blocking up up the shadows?

Well, you can never be completely sure. Once in a while you will get a scene that totally overexposes or underexposes for seemingly no good reason.
That why it’s good to know the film, to factor as much of that uncertainty out of the equation.

My best advice WRT metering is to use incident metering where possible.
But often the most interesting scenes are impossible to meter with an incident dome.

For what it’s worth here is the datasheet for the emulsion: https://www.agfa.com/specialty-products/wp-content/uploads/sites/8/2017/06/AVIPHOT-PAN-200.pdf

Agfa G. rates it at 200, but that is through aerial perspective (ever-present haze) and for the generally low contrast targets of earth as seen from a plane. That will speed any film up.
Something like a Panaflasher would probably help with this film.
 

super_claret

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Well, you can never be completely sure. Once in a while you will get a scene that totally overexposes or underexposes for seemingly no good reason.
That why it’s good to know the film, to factor as much of that uncertainty out of the equation.

My best advice WRT metering is to use incident metering where possible.
But often the most interesting scenes are impossible to meter with an incident dome.

Think I understand now, I wasn’t getting the IR part of the equation and it not been visible to the meter or human eye. So with this in mind, how much should I bracket by?
For what it’s worth here is the datasheet for the emulsion: https://www.agfa.com/specialty-products/wp-content/uploads/sites/8/2017/06/AVIPHOT-PAN-200.pdf

Agfa G. rates it at 200, but that is through aerial perspective (ever-present haze) and for the generally low contrast targets of earth as seen from a plane. That will speed any film up.
Something like a Panaflasher would probably help with this film.

I hadn’t realised it was a rebranded Agfa film. So think I’ll probably start by rating it at 200 unfiltered, then adjust accordingly, depending on the filter in use. I’m thinking a bracket at plus and minus 2 stops. I’ll be scanning and inkjet printing by the way.
 

super_claret

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As for the exposure, that sounds workable, but it is always a good idea to bracket because the truth of the matter is that your meter doesn't actually read the same light you are recording on the film - it reads the light within the visible spectrum that accompanies the near-infrared light the filter is passing.
And the ratio of near-infrared to to visible varies due to a bunch of factors that are hard to measure or control - things like how much the foliage in your subject is reflecting near-infrared.
Using these films involves a certain amount of experience based educated guessing. That is part of the fun!
As for "contrast", I think your concern is probably better referred to as Subject Luminance Range - how "bright" the highlights are, vs. how "dark" the shadows are. You may notice that "bright" and "dark" are in quotes here, because it isn't how "bright" or "dark" they look, but rather how much or how little near-infrared light is reflecting off those parts of the subject, something that neither our eyes or our meters can see.

Thanks for the input Matt, appreciate it
 

pentaxuser

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The flash is of course to light up foreground if it’s on camera flash. Can be useful in the shade and for pure effect.
But I have tried crazy stuff like bringing all my nine Cactus V5 triggers to the park with V285s on each.
That sure creates some interesting effects. But you probably need an assistant to watch the equipment, time to set it up and of course clear intent.

Thanks for the answer on the use of the flashgun which was as I had anticipated but the main part of my post was my questions on exactly how you would proceed in the scenes which you described in #76 covering open sun etc

Can I ask again what you do in those scenes from a baseline of EI 10?

Thanks

pentaxuser
 
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