Rui.Cardoso
Member
Hello All,
This is my first post... I found this site a week ago and up to now, I'm quite pleased with what I found here!
I've been using Maco IR820c 120mm for some time with a B+W 092 (89b) filter with good results. When my stock of Maco ran out I started testing with Rollei IR 400.
For my first tests I used the same B+W 092 filter, shot in the same conditions and metered the scenes using my hand-held spot meter the same way I did for the Maco. I tested using ISO 25, 12 and 6. The film was developed with Xtol 1:2 for 13 minutes (20º celcius).
Altough I have some frames that are correctly exposed and developed (most of them between iso 12 and 6), I'm hardly getting any IR effect! Blue/cloudy skyes come out nicelly, but the film renders green foliage much the same way a normal b&w film would when exposed through an orange or red filter.
I saw in the Rollei brochure that they recomend an 88a filter instead of the 89b I'm using, they seam too close to make a difference, but I'll try an 88a if I can find one... Before going for another filter, I'll also try to overexpose the film a little more as recomended in the Rollei brochure.
Other than these, does anyone have any ideas or experiences to share?
Best Regards,
-Rui Cardoso
This is my first post... I found this site a week ago and up to now, I'm quite pleased with what I found here!
I've been using Maco IR820c 120mm for some time with a B+W 092 (89b) filter with good results. When my stock of Maco ran out I started testing with Rollei IR 400.
For my first tests I used the same B+W 092 filter, shot in the same conditions and metered the scenes using my hand-held spot meter the same way I did for the Maco. I tested using ISO 25, 12 and 6. The film was developed with Xtol 1:2 for 13 minutes (20º celcius).
Altough I have some frames that are correctly exposed and developed (most of them between iso 12 and 6), I'm hardly getting any IR effect! Blue/cloudy skyes come out nicelly, but the film renders green foliage much the same way a normal b&w film would when exposed through an orange or red filter.
I saw in the Rollei brochure that they recomend an 88a filter instead of the 89b I'm using, they seam too close to make a difference, but I'll try an 88a if I can find one... Before going for another filter, I'll also try to overexpose the film a little more as recomended in the Rollei brochure.
Other than these, does anyone have any ideas or experiences to share?
Best Regards,
-Rui Cardoso