Juan Valdenebro
Member
I guess most of you have checked the fotoimport.no site, where we can see how some films behave in a few developers... Basically to check grain, but also IQ and tone in general, though the latter can be tuned to some degree with exposure and development.
What surprise? Some time ago, as I like sharp grain, I took a look at those samples there and went for some FX-39 and TMY... Today I took a longer look,t see how different four ISO400 films look in FX-39: Tri-x, Delta400, HP5+ and TMY.
This is very important for 35mm users, and close to nothing for bigger sizes... If you check those four films all in FX-39, you'll see a clear, no doubt order in IQ: TMY is the best one, with Tri-x showing the worst definition, no surprise, but what I was not expecting, was to see HP5 close to TMY, while Delta is clearly closer to Tri-x... So, my surprise was and is, how can HP5, a film that's considered a lot grainier than TMY, behave that well, precisely in FX-39, a developer that's known for exploiting sharp grain for acutance: yet it makes hp5 smooth !
Then I thought, let's check Xtol in this site too, a developer I tried some time ago but left alone (in the middle of high hopes) because my tests using stock and dilutions up to 1+3 (can't remember if I did them with fp4, Tri-x or hp5) showed xtol being too solvent even diluted...
I imagined I was about to see more or less the same results for those four films but a la Xtol... But... Wrong!
In Xtol TMY looks the best again... But Delta looks great in Xtol, close to TMY, and Tri-x gets better compared to FX-39, while, second surprise, HP5+ becomes grainy in Xtol and shows the worst IQ...
How can Xtol, with its solvency, make hp5 that grainy, while it makes Tri-x look better? A rethorical question, Tri-x and Xtol are Kodak, but what matters is, now I think things are a lot more complex and out of possible general rules than I was taught or used to think for many years...
I don't think the site has wrong testing at all, by the way, because FX-39 is often recommended for slow and medium speed films, and not for ISO400, TMY being, because of its finer grain, a special case as Crawley and others have stated... And that's exactly what the site shows: terrible Tri-x and wonderful TMY in fx-39...
I'd be glad to listen to stories of this type... Not looking for magic bullets here, but it seems possibly there are some sweet secrets between the lines...
What surprise? Some time ago, as I like sharp grain, I took a look at those samples there and went for some FX-39 and TMY... Today I took a longer look,t see how different four ISO400 films look in FX-39: Tri-x, Delta400, HP5+ and TMY.
This is very important for 35mm users, and close to nothing for bigger sizes... If you check those four films all in FX-39, you'll see a clear, no doubt order in IQ: TMY is the best one, with Tri-x showing the worst definition, no surprise, but what I was not expecting, was to see HP5 close to TMY, while Delta is clearly closer to Tri-x... So, my surprise was and is, how can HP5, a film that's considered a lot grainier than TMY, behave that well, precisely in FX-39, a developer that's known for exploiting sharp grain for acutance: yet it makes hp5 smooth !
Then I thought, let's check Xtol in this site too, a developer I tried some time ago but left alone (in the middle of high hopes) because my tests using stock and dilutions up to 1+3 (can't remember if I did them with fp4, Tri-x or hp5) showed xtol being too solvent even diluted...
I imagined I was about to see more or less the same results for those four films but a la Xtol... But... Wrong!
In Xtol TMY looks the best again... But Delta looks great in Xtol, close to TMY, and Tri-x gets better compared to FX-39, while, second surprise, HP5+ becomes grainy in Xtol and shows the worst IQ...
How can Xtol, with its solvency, make hp5 that grainy, while it makes Tri-x look better? A rethorical question, Tri-x and Xtol are Kodak, but what matters is, now I think things are a lot more complex and out of possible general rules than I was taught or used to think for many years...
I don't think the site has wrong testing at all, by the way, because FX-39 is often recommended for slow and medium speed films, and not for ISO400, TMY being, because of its finer grain, a special case as Crawley and others have stated... And that's exactly what the site shows: terrible Tri-x and wonderful TMY in fx-39...
I'd be glad to listen to stories of this type... Not looking for magic bullets here, but it seems possibly there are some sweet secrets between the lines...