df cardwell
Subscriber
Years, and years, ago I shot XP1 when it was new. Gosh, it was an awful experience. I was pretty sure it was because the labs couldn't manage it, but it was a disaster.
I think it correlated with the general decline in lab quality in the US, and subsequent attempts with the film were dismal, so I wrote of chromagenic B&W.
Well, there's a big portrait project coming up. Lots of families. Lots of proofs needed. A fund raiser, not unlike Suzanne Revy's upcoming work. I'll scan the selected image for publication, and make pictures for the family. If I can lab the film out, get good proofs back, great. Ilford's new film has gotten some great reviews, and some friends like it a lot. So, I did a test roll today.
Open shade, graycard, macbeth checker, kodak grey scale: incident reading.
Nikon F5, 105/2. Threes shots at the reading, and a 4 stop bracket, and three more shots right on. Processed locally, in a Frontier.
Here's the good news: even the +/- 4 proofs were acceptable: Frontier magic. And ilford magic. On the densitometer, the film performs at box speed: zone V = .75.
Enlarged, the film looks sharp/mushy like straight D-76. OK, so I can live with it looking like TX and D-76.
And the whole Frontier thing is great: I still whimper when I remember the decade of crappy lab work that is responsible for digital. Like proofing 35mm film through mylar sleeves because the work was done so fast by wage slaves they couldn't afford scratching the film, but it was always scratched anyway... and totally blurry to boot.
But this XP2 Super stuff looks great. The project just got easier.
Reading density patches and plotting them, it looks like Ilford's curve at the website is dead on. Great.
Just wanted to share. Thanks Ilford.
d
.
I think it correlated with the general decline in lab quality in the US, and subsequent attempts with the film were dismal, so I wrote of chromagenic B&W.
Well, there's a big portrait project coming up. Lots of families. Lots of proofs needed. A fund raiser, not unlike Suzanne Revy's upcoming work. I'll scan the selected image for publication, and make pictures for the family. If I can lab the film out, get good proofs back, great. Ilford's new film has gotten some great reviews, and some friends like it a lot. So, I did a test roll today.
Open shade, graycard, macbeth checker, kodak grey scale: incident reading.
Nikon F5, 105/2. Threes shots at the reading, and a 4 stop bracket, and three more shots right on. Processed locally, in a Frontier.
Here's the good news: even the +/- 4 proofs were acceptable: Frontier magic. And ilford magic. On the densitometer, the film performs at box speed: zone V = .75.
Enlarged, the film looks sharp/mushy like straight D-76. OK, so I can live with it looking like TX and D-76.

And the whole Frontier thing is great: I still whimper when I remember the decade of crappy lab work that is responsible for digital. Like proofing 35mm film through mylar sleeves because the work was done so fast by wage slaves they couldn't afford scratching the film, but it was always scratched anyway... and totally blurry to boot.
But this XP2 Super stuff looks great. The project just got easier.
Reading density patches and plotting them, it looks like Ilford's curve at the website is dead on. Great.
Just wanted to share. Thanks Ilford.
d
.