- Joined
- Sep 24, 2002
- Messages
- 1,021
I shot three rolls of the new TMY last Saturday. I took it to a very good lab for developing and printing, and...and...I'm really disappointed.
I found the grain to be quite pronounced--to the point of being distracting---almost like 1970's TXP.
In all fairness to Kodak, here are the finer details:
Film:35mm TMY Improved
Camera: Olympus Stylus, autofocus
Location: Interior of a church with stained glass window casting all sorts of colorful hues onthe subjects(my reason for goingwith B&W)
Skin tones: Swedish, for the most part.
Developer: Tmax
When I asked the clerk I was told that the grain was a product of thier digital printing which is set up for RA-4 color negatives.
Can anyone here comment on this? I've been eager to shoot some 8x10 TMY but at $5/sheet I'm suspicious (and I've had great results with the old TMY) I know that LF effectively takes grain out of the equation but I've never had anything like this happen with the old TMY in 35mm either.
I found the grain to be quite pronounced--to the point of being distracting---almost like 1970's TXP.
In all fairness to Kodak, here are the finer details:
Film:35mm TMY Improved
Camera: Olympus Stylus, autofocus
Location: Interior of a church with stained glass window casting all sorts of colorful hues onthe subjects(my reason for goingwith B&W)
Skin tones: Swedish, for the most part.
Developer: Tmax
When I asked the clerk I was told that the grain was a product of thier digital printing which is set up for RA-4 color negatives.
Can anyone here comment on this? I've been eager to shoot some 8x10 TMY but at $5/sheet I'm suspicious (and I've had great results with the old TMY) I know that LF effectively takes grain out of the equation but I've never had anything like this happen with the old TMY in 35mm either.
using traditional processes but the average consumer will take his film to the photo store like I did and wonder Whiskey Tango Foxtrot went wrong with that 'spensive film Kodak reps are all giddy about. 