My first roll of TMax in 25 years, and...

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Autonerd

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Bought some T-Max (400 and 100) to try out before I commit to my next 100' roll (probably FP4).

I finished the 400-speed roll first and processed it. As expected, the textures are really nice, lots of grays (I'd take more contrast), And the grain seems tiny. In fact... too tiny. I scanned on my V550 at 6400 dpi, zoomed in, and thought... Digital. It looks like a digital pic. But not as contrasty.

I dunno, am I being too much of a purist?
 

Cholentpot

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If you don't want it, I'll take it. Tmax is my favorite b&w film. It doesn't look digital to me, digital b&w in general looks wrong somehow. Tmax is juuuust right.
 

Sirius Glass

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Tmax has a nice long straight curve, good reciprocity and very fine tabular grain, but I still prefer traditional grain films.
 

RedSun

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Bought some T-Max (400 and 100) to try out before I commit to my next 100' roll (probably FP4).

I finished the 400-speed roll first and processed it. As expected, the textures are really nice, lots of grays (I'd take more contrast), And the grain seems tiny. In fact... too tiny. I scanned on my V550 at 6400 dpi, zoomed in, and thought... Digital. It looks like a digital pic. But not as contrasty.

I dunno, am I being too much of a purist?
Is this 35mm film?

Normally for SF 35mm, you want less grainy. Scan from negative would show the grains. You get a lot choices with MF and LF films.

You can change developer time, and use stock solution for more grainy negatives.
 

MattKing

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I scanned on my V550 at 6400 dpi, zoomed in, and thought... Digital. It looks like a digital pic. But not as contrasty.
Only because you scanned it - and at 3-4 times the optical resolution of your scanner - and let the software make the choices that software makes.
I can assure you that if you were to print it using an enlarger, it wouldn't look "digital". It would look really fine grain, and like T-Max.
 

removed account4

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yeah tmax films are like that
kind of lots of mid tones until you
process it in something a little stronger
to give it a contrast boost. there isn't much grain
cause its not a grainy film :wink: it is what it is. ilfor DELTA films
are sorta kinda like tmax films, the hp5+ is a traditional film like tri x ..
you will notice a big difference between the tmax and hp5 , like night and day

have fun !
john
ps, it looked "digital" cause you ... digitized the negative ! all film looks digital at that point.. :wink:
 

markbau

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I know exactly what you mean. I haven’t used it in years. It old prints made from TMax in the late 80’s have a look that I don’t care for and yes, they look digital yo my eyes, still, some people think TMax is the bees knees!
 

Prest_400

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I've left 3 rolls of TMX at my parent's home for when I visit. Actually the first roll of TMX I ever used was from an abandoned bulk loader in our camera club, exp 1996, and although a bit fogged its results were fantastic!
Bear in mind the v550 doesn't have that much of real optical resolution and may smear the grain a bit. Another part of the "digital look" is the sprectral sensitization adjusted blue sensitivity, a normal daylight scene will show as if a light yellow filter were applied. That I like as there is no loss of speed from filtering compared to other films.

I do want to try TMY in 120 although I've standardised on HP5, and the price difference in EU doesn't foster doing so much trying when "if it ain't broke" working with Ilford.
 
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The Kodak price hikes have put most of their films out of my reach, there being alternatives, but TMY is the one that really pains me. That is a technically brilliant and beautiful film.
 

Andrew O'Neill

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I wonder if ILFORD will release Delta 400 in large format, at least 5x4? For medium format work there is enough of an improvement in TMY-2 over HP5 Plus that the premium is something I can accept.

I would love to see Delta 400 in large format again. I used to use it back in the 90's. I still shoot it in 120. Great film. Great look. But, HP5 is my favourite.
 

Andrew O'Neill

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GarageBoy

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Because the only difference between digital and film is grain...
 

darkosaric

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Develop it in Rodinal 1+25, with strong agitation...print it on FB with filter 3 or higher ... grain and more contrast will be there:
 

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