i miss tri x 400 ortho,
it was beautiful stuff
Is Maco ort25 still being made, or is it now called something else? I haven't used it in a few years. Love it though. Spectacular for portraits of men.
I'm told you can simulate the effect on pan film with a blue filter. Anyone tried it?
Ilford do a range of ortho films in sheet form. And Rollei and Adox produce ortho films in 35mm (Rollei also supplies it in 120).
The films tend to be high contrast, and require soft working developers for pictorial use, and can produce very fine grain and good sharpness.
Ilford have this - http://www.ilfordphoto.com/products/product.asp?n=55&t=Specialist+Products
Note - the 5x4 film is actually 5x4 - not the slightly trimmed down version that fits Darkslides
Is Maco ort25 still being made, or is it now called something else? I haven't used it in a few years. Love it though. Spectacular for portraits of men.
I'm told you can simulate the effect on pan film with a blue filter. Anyone tried it?
Hi
interesting ... I didn't know there was a difference
Yes, I agree with you. It was one of my favorites too, along with Kodak's "Commercial" film. If I recall, it was numbered 4127 in the catalog. Unfortunately, Kodak has discontinued most of my favorite films.
Dave
If the film is too contrasty it has more to do with developer and development methods than just the film. In fact, since ortho emulsions see only blue blue/green light shadows are opened up which should reduce overall contrast.
The Ilford Ortho film is used mainly as a copy film but has normal contrast when processed normally and requires much longer dev times/concentrations or different developers for higher contrasts, the reverse of most graphics films.
Ian
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