Two years ago I shot a handful of rolls of Kentmere 100 and 400. I saw a lot to like ($40 for a bulk roll! From a company dedicated to supporting B&W!), but I quickly found a lot of things I didn't like. The D76 dev times are long, the film is a pain to load in the reels, and the nail in the coffin for me at the time, it scans like crap on my V600. So I'd just spend a couple of bucks more per roll and go with HP5 or Delta.
After last night in the darkroom, I've changed my tune on Kentmere. The negatives (processed in D76, and shot using the guidance of my OM40's light meter) are beautifully dense. There is a tonne of dynamic range (a little bit of dodging and burning made a world of difference from the work print). The scans suggeted nasty grain, but in fact it is a really nice grain. It is very crisp and high contrast, making it easy to focus in the grain finder, but on the print it doesn't feel intrusive at all (5x7 prints have essentially no grain).
For the past few nights I've been printing from C41 films (talk about hard to find grain) and some very thin (my error) rolls of Plus-X. The difference from those to the Kentmere is just a wonderfully pleasant surprise.
So there you go, if you've been put off Kentmere because of scans you've seen, but haven't used it in a darkroom, it's well worth trying.
After last night in the darkroom, I've changed my tune on Kentmere. The negatives (processed in D76, and shot using the guidance of my OM40's light meter) are beautifully dense. There is a tonne of dynamic range (a little bit of dodging and burning made a world of difference from the work print). The scans suggeted nasty grain, but in fact it is a really nice grain. It is very crisp and high contrast, making it easy to focus in the grain finder, but on the print it doesn't feel intrusive at all (5x7 prints have essentially no grain).
For the past few nights I've been printing from C41 films (talk about hard to find grain) and some very thin (my error) rolls of Plus-X. The difference from those to the Kentmere is just a wonderfully pleasant surprise.
So there you go, if you've been put off Kentmere because of scans you've seen, but haven't used it in a darkroom, it's well worth trying.


