I guess I am not alone in wondering what to shoot in the future now that neopan 400 is gone. I read somewhere someone saying that the nearest thing in terms of tonality to neopan 400 is FP4+, I am going to try a few rolls anyway but I was wondering on your opinions and experiences in this area.
I really love the tonality of neopan 400 but find it a little grainy, probably because the grain looks very sharp to me rather than the amount. I guess I got conditioned by the extremely fine grain of Acros as that is where I started back in again in B&W. T-max 400 grain I don't mind but nothing else about it got me excited like neopan 400 did. Its a pain the light here in the UK as for 3 months of the year on the south coast its easy shooting the slower films but the rest of the year, well one could easily standardise on a 400 speed film all year round. If the FP4+ does the job for me I may shoot that and just keep some neopan 400 in the freezer for when I really need a faster film. I only shoot 35mm and have had an experienced local lab do all the processing in ID-11 to date.
I really love the tonality of neopan 400 but find it a little grainy, probably because the grain looks very sharp to me rather than the amount. I guess I got conditioned by the extremely fine grain of Acros as that is where I started back in again in B&W. T-max 400 grain I don't mind but nothing else about it got me excited like neopan 400 did. Its a pain the light here in the UK as for 3 months of the year on the south coast its easy shooting the slower films but the rest of the year, well one could easily standardise on a 400 speed film all year round. If the FP4+ does the job for me I may shoot that and just keep some neopan 400 in the freezer for when I really need a faster film. I only shoot 35mm and have had an experienced local lab do all the processing in ID-11 to date.
