Juan Valdenebro
Member
The film that’s been considered the most versatile film for decades is Ilford’s HP5+: superb for MF and LF with correct exposure and development. It also works very well in the world’s most appreciated developers of late, Xtol and Pyrocat-HD. And in 35mm, it’s amazingly versatile, from very small grain in Perceptol at EI160-320, to decent grain and outstanding tone at EI400-800 in standard MQ developers, and even with great usable tone for wet printing in Microphen at EI1600 and 3200 if the scene is of normal contrast.
TMax100, one of the best films ever, is used by most people in one of two ways: some people use it -landscape and other uses- for MF and LF tripod work, exposing it at EI50-100 with small aperture values, for fine detail rendering; and some other people use it in 35mm for the same high definition reasons, and when tripods are out of the story, TMax100 allows us to use it handholding with relatively wide aperture values like f/2.8 and f/4 depending on light… This means TMax100 is a film for focusing, and not for zone focus, if the case is street photography.
In my personal system for street photography (in 2020 I published an educational book in B&W film photography in my country) years ago I've used ISO400 films at EI640 for f/11 and at EI320 for f/8: that for no tripod and zone focusing… When I use TMax100 inside my system (a system that “names” the same way different intensities of light no matter the format, film or EI used) I keep my lenses at f/4 and expose it at EI80 when handholding: that’s for focusing every scene, and that works well most of the times, but some of you doing street photography know there are situations -and those are not uncommon- when whe have no time at all for focusing…
Years ago I tried to make FP4+ (at EI160 in Microphen) a film for street: in my system that implied f/5.6 as fix aperture, so a 28mm is what I used in that case because it gives similar/enough DOF as a 35mm at f/8 (EI320) or a 50mm at f/11 (EI640)… It worked well, but, you know beautiful FP4+’s temper: its middle tones are sweet at EI64 only, and of course at EI160 it leaves us hoping for a lot more from its tone and grain…
So, now I’m working on 35mm TMX at EI160 for street at f/5.6 with a 28mm trying to exploit its high definition, and it seems it’s useable even for zone focusing…
Of course I’m not interested in pushing TMX: at EI200 and above I prefer ISO400 film…
Is someone using TMax100 for 35mm zone focusing?
TMax100, one of the best films ever, is used by most people in one of two ways: some people use it -landscape and other uses- for MF and LF tripod work, exposing it at EI50-100 with small aperture values, for fine detail rendering; and some other people use it in 35mm for the same high definition reasons, and when tripods are out of the story, TMax100 allows us to use it handholding with relatively wide aperture values like f/2.8 and f/4 depending on light… This means TMax100 is a film for focusing, and not for zone focus, if the case is street photography.
In my personal system for street photography (in 2020 I published an educational book in B&W film photography in my country) years ago I've used ISO400 films at EI640 for f/11 and at EI320 for f/8: that for no tripod and zone focusing… When I use TMax100 inside my system (a system that “names” the same way different intensities of light no matter the format, film or EI used) I keep my lenses at f/4 and expose it at EI80 when handholding: that’s for focusing every scene, and that works well most of the times, but some of you doing street photography know there are situations -and those are not uncommon- when whe have no time at all for focusing…
Years ago I tried to make FP4+ (at EI160 in Microphen) a film for street: in my system that implied f/5.6 as fix aperture, so a 28mm is what I used in that case because it gives similar/enough DOF as a 35mm at f/8 (EI320) or a 50mm at f/11 (EI640)… It worked well, but, you know beautiful FP4+’s temper: its middle tones are sweet at EI64 only, and of course at EI160 it leaves us hoping for a lot more from its tone and grain…
So, now I’m working on 35mm TMX at EI160 for street at f/5.6 with a 28mm trying to exploit its high definition, and it seems it’s useable even for zone focusing…
Of course I’m not interested in pushing TMX: at EI200 and above I prefer ISO400 film…
Is someone using TMax100 for 35mm zone focusing?