bblhed
Member
I put this in the color film category because there is no general film category, if it is in the wrong place please move it so I know where it should have been.
My question: The other day someone posted about adding DX codes to their bulk load cassettes and they posted a link to a DX decoding chart and that got me thinking. Kodak Gold 400 film has a DX code on it that says it can be pulled 1 stop and pushed 3 stops without changing the processing same with 400TX. So if I am reading this right I should be able to shoot these films at ISO 3200 and get printable results, I assume my prints would have a lot of grain, but still be printable.
Is this crazy talk, am I reading something wrong, or is it true that you can shoot Kodak ISO 400 consumer film at ISO 3200 and get acceptable prints from it? I assume results would be better the closer you got to box speed, but I am wondering if you can really push it that far with acceptable results. If this is true, all I can say is wow.
Thank you for setting me straight and not banging me over the head with a stick, I looked and couldn't find a thread where someone mentioned this before.
My question: The other day someone posted about adding DX codes to their bulk load cassettes and they posted a link to a DX decoding chart and that got me thinking. Kodak Gold 400 film has a DX code on it that says it can be pulled 1 stop and pushed 3 stops without changing the processing same with 400TX. So if I am reading this right I should be able to shoot these films at ISO 3200 and get printable results, I assume my prints would have a lot of grain, but still be printable.
Is this crazy talk, am I reading something wrong, or is it true that you can shoot Kodak ISO 400 consumer film at ISO 3200 and get acceptable prints from it? I assume results would be better the closer you got to box speed, but I am wondering if you can really push it that far with acceptable results. If this is true, all I can say is wow.
Thank you for setting me straight and not banging me over the head with a stick, I looked and couldn't find a thread where someone mentioned this before.