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Well said, Simon. Thank you for sharing that.
Viva HP5+!![]()
Who is this Simon fellow?
Well said, Simon. Thank you for sharing that.
Viva HP5+!![]()
Who is this Simon fellow?
Who is this Simon fellow?
Much sound advice on photographing children. Mine are 2, 5, and 14 and I really only subject them to planned group shots once a year. The oldest (who also is an analog shooter!) can be easily bribed to sit with promises of film. The other two are pretty much catch as catch can. Here is a shot of my oldest:
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You can probably guess this is tri-x. Was also still adjusting a bit to the change from 6x6 to 645. All that extra space!
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Wait you shot these a while ago? Or you actually took my advice? Lol
Space heaters.I have an electric oil filled radiator type that keeps my darkroom comfy all winter. No AC for summer though when temps even in my basement can be in the upper 70s.
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use plastic basin with water for tempering and wollen top over blouse
hypo eliminator and minimum water wash
when the ice melts you will be sorry
This is lovely, Ruby!
Dear All,
Simon : ILFORD Photo / HARMAN technology Limited
awesome response!So, I had a bit of a panic today. None of my usual sources had Tri-X 120 in stock. NONE. Normally, I'd be all zen and just wait for it to be available, but I actually need it by the 19th. Eventually I did find it, for more than I'd prefer, but those in need have to take what they can get. But I did ponder what I would have used instead.
My first thought was T-Max. But while I like T-Max for certain things, it would not have given me the look I wanted. At least, not the way I normally shoot it. I've only used Ilford and Kodak BNW film; maybe I'm missing out?
What would you use if you wanted to use Tri-X but couldn't? Would you change how you shot or developed?
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Hi SimonDear All,
I have read through this thread :
Firstly : NO I cannot imagine a world without Tri-X, from the outset, its a great film, always was, still is, but I am partisan obviously so I love HP5+ more...which I do.
Simon : ILFORD Photo / HARMAN technology Limited
There is a natural tendency for Americans to be very loyal to the Kodak products, which can blindfold folk from seeing the advantages of choosing a manufacturer whose very reason to exist is black and white analogue photography. For black and white, Ilford makes better films, in a wider range of choices than Kodak ever did. It is with envy that I notice you can buy Ilford films in America at much lower prices than we in England have to pay. Very frustrating when it seems that generally the American photographers are oblivious to their good fortune and still continue to prefer the inferior, but home grown product.
RR

Taking all into consideration today, it must surely be agreed that the offer from Kodak is inferior compared to the offer from Ilford.
I don't think we have ever had a 'gushing ILFORD fangirl' before..
Simon ILFORD Photo / HARMAN technology Limited.
This is a thread about celebrating the fact that Tri-X IS still available, enriching the market.
'Best' is an epithet that exists in the realm of personal choice. I can show you granularity and resolution figures for TMax 400 and compare it to Delta 400. Or TMax 100 and compare it to Delta 100. And easily draw the conclusion that Kodak is better than Ilford. But I won't. Because it doesn't matter.
You'd be far better off if you simply claimed what you say as your opinion. Arguing over who is best will get us absolutely nowhere.
I think all that can be said is the offer is smaller. Everything else would have to be a matter of opinion. Objectively, it simply cannot be argued the current line of TMax films (for example) are inferior products. In fact the opposite could be a defensible position. The same goes for something like XTOL. And I say these things as someone who uses plenty of Ilford products and supports them.
All you can really say is you prefer Ilford's stuff to Kodak's.
Trash talk? Do you mean criticism? Are we to stay silent for fear the world will shun Kodak and all will be lost?
In response to your demands here are a couple of facts.
FACT: Kodak has a lot to learn from Ilford, particularly in customer care and support.
FACT: Kodak could also choose a less curly substrate to make its 120 roll films out of.
BTW this vituperous defence of Kodak does rather confirm my original assertion about many American photographers.
RR
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