New ortho 120 film from Foma

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foc

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According to this Kosmofoto post, the Czech Republic film producer Foma Bohemia has announced a few orthochromatic medium-format black-and-white film which is being released this summer.

Foma Ortho 400 will only be available in 120 and Foma Bohemia told Kosmo Foto the film will start being stocked by distributors from June.

I see that it is not yet listed on their website but is available in their online shop.

foma ortho 400 in 120.jpg
 
  • pentaxuser
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  • Reason: I checked the shop and it clearly says 400 so post is redundant

Rudeofus

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This film would be exceedingly useful in large formats. I tried to get my hand on this Bergger print film back then - never received a single sheet. Must have come and gone in the same instance. If Foma produces such an emulsion now, and if this emulsion can be reversed properly, it would enable all kinds of alternative photography fun based on my small and medium format negatives.
 

albireo

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According to this Kosmofoto post, the Czech Republic film producer Foma Bohemia has announced a few orthochromatic medium-format black-and-white film which is being released this summer.

Foma Ortho 400 will only be available in 120 and Foma Bohemia told Kosmo Foto the film will start being stocked by distributors from June.

I see that it is not yet listed on their website but is available in their online shop.

View attachment 339159

Fantastic news. Love their standard 400 in 120 for everything but people. The high red sensitivity just makes white people's complexion and lips look off for my taste. I was about to look into Ilford Ortho 80 but the low sensitivity and extremely high price (relative to FP4/HP5) had put me off. Eager to try this.
 
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FotoD

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Great news! Hope it will be released in sheets as well.
 

pentaxuser

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I wonder how Foma has managed to make a 400 ortho film when all the rest have much lower speeds or is there no reason why an ortho film can't be 400?

pentaxuser
 

Lachlan Young

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I wonder how Foma has managed to make a 400 ortho film when all the rest have much lower speeds or is there no reason why an ortho film can't be 400?

pentaxuser

You might want to look up Kodak 4163 Tri-X Ortho.

No reason why you can't make a high speed ortho film, it's just that when most of the market for ortho/ blue sensitive materials was not for general camera usage but for technical/ darkroom purposes, excessive speed could be a disadvantage.
 
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foc

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From the Foma online shop, showing the difference between Foma Ortho 400 and Fomapan 400.


F_400-O_400_P_compare_02_S.jpg
 

pentaxuser

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Thanks that a very striking change. I presume her hair and jumper are both quite a bright red. Just a pity that all detail in the jumper has disappeared compared to the non ortho picture

Am I safe in presuming that detail in anything red should not be lost per se simply because it is ortho?

Thanks

pentaxuser
 

Don_ih

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Am I safe in presuming that detail in anything red should not be lost per se simply because it is ortho?

Depends on the red. If the red is purplish, some of that blue will register on the ortho film. But genuine red won't. It'll essentially be the same as black. In other words, red turns into the darkest shadow region of the scene when you use ortho film, and any detail you get out of it will be because of what amount of not-red is in that apparent red colour.

Get a genuine blue filter and look at something red through it to see what detail you'd get.
 

pentaxuser

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Thanks Don. What I was thinking of is that with a panchro film any folds in a black(the red equivalent) sweater normally show up if the development is correct so I had thought the same would apply here. OK I accept there is a tendency for a black garment not to show detail in the likes of folds and development might be more critical

pentaxuser
 

pentaxuser

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You might want to look up Kodak 4163 Tri-X Ortho.

No reason why you can't make a high speed ortho film, it's just that when most of the market for ortho/ blue sensitive materials was not for general camera usage but for technical/ darkroom purposes, excessive speed could be a disadvantage.
It was simply a thought on my part given the advantages of a 400 speed and in the case of Ilford Ortho 80 this was a recently devised film. Maybe Ilford had good reasons for making an 80 speed but unless this was easier or cheaper to devise then 400 has a lot of advantages. I just get the impression that Ilford's 400 speed films such as D400 and HP5 Plus are its best sellers

pentaxuser
 
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According to this Kosmofoto post, the Czech Republic film producer Foma Bohemia has announced a few orthochromatic medium-format black-and-white film which is being released this summer.

Foma Ortho 400 will only be available in 120 and Foma Bohemia told Kosmo Foto the film will start being stocked by distributors from June.

I see that it is not yet listed on their website but is available in their online shop.

View attachment 339159

Why only in 120 format?
 
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It was simply a thought on my part given the advantages of a 400 speed and in the case of Ilford Ortho 80 this was a recently devised film. Maybe Ilford had good reasons for making an 80 speed but unless this was easier or cheaper to devise then 400 has a lot of advantages. I just get the impression that Ilford's 400 speed films such as D400 and HP5 Plus are its best sellers

pentaxuser

I see lots of grain in the examples posted by Foma, and let's remember it's in medium format. Lots of grain in medium format?
 

albireo

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I see lots of grain in the examples posted by Foma, and let's remember it's in medium format. Lots of grain in medium format?

They're likely to have been heavily cropped. Foma 400 in 120 in Fomadon P stock is close to grainless in my workflow.

Another sample which includes a colour reference (bottom right)

HFAM0C4.jpg
 
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pentaxuser

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They're likely to have been heavily cropped. Foma 400 in 120 in Fomadon P stock is close to grainless in my workflow.

Another sample which includes a colour reference (bottom right)

HFAM0C4.jpg

Thanks the Ortho shot here looks considerably better than the top close up shot


pentaxuser
 
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Very exciting to see some new offerings from Foma, especially after the introduction of Kentmere in 120.


If their respective data sheets are to the same scale, I expect this new Foma film to exhibit a 'more ortho' look than Ilford's Ortho Plus. Foma peaks in green sensitivity and tails off towards red while Ilford appears to have a more abrupt cutoff. Yellow and orange would appear darker on the Foma ortho, potentially producing more contrast, depending on the scene.

The Foma probably loses speed much more quickly under tungsten lights compared to Ortho Plus, but being a 400 vs 80 box speed it would be an interesting comparison.

I'll purchase a few rolls, especially if the price is in line with standard Fomapan. I'll bet this stuff is amazing when reversal processed...
 
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Flighter

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I'll purchase a few rolls, especially if the price is in line with standard Fomapan. I'll bet this stuff is amazing when reversal processed...
Looks like it will be a bit more expensive, the Foma online shop (which only ships to the EU) has it at €5.94 per roll compared to the standard Fomapan 400 at €4.70 per roll.
 
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If they're all single 120 rolls in plastic snap cases, that seems reasonable. Then again I'm also down with a small premium for Fomapan in the retro packaging. But shipping from the EU... ay caramba.

This is probably now the fastest ortho film available. The fastest, strongly ortho film I think I've used is Fuji X-ray with a nominal ISO of 100; most are 12 or lower. That may account for the extra grain in the examples but to my eye grain helps add acutance in medium format.
 
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