This one is easy. No flash, windows only, church interior, bride and groom (white and black extremes). This means harsh contrasts, and mixed with a fine-grain requirement...
This one has Ilford XP2 written all over it.
i've already dealt with that temptation, i would LOVE to use xp2 but i think my wife and sister in law are wanting a more traditional look
i stand generally corrected... i was confusing xp2 and sfx. now i'm back to square one. is the high contrast due to your development or the film?
xp2 is c-41? that's something i was thinking i wanted to stay away from. i'm just getting familiar with regular developing, c-41 seems a little complex for me. although i think i still might shoot it in addition to others on my hiking trips, i really like to results you got ralph.
You don't really know what the lighting at the wedding will be like until you get there. Window light may create high contrast within the composition, and it may not. The majority of weddings I have shot in window light only have been incredibly flat within the compositions, even if the over all scene (meaning the whole room including the windows themselves) was high in contrast. There are areas within every high contrast location that are low in contrast, and you may be shooting inside of one of them. It depends on lots of things. As I said before, come prepared to handle anything. I'd bring some T-Max and shoot it if the light is on the flat side of things, or pretty normal in contrast, and some XP-2 if the light is super contrasty. Most of all, if you are not going to use an incident meter or a grey card, learn to tweak what your camera's meter is telling you. It will not give you the ideal exposure in anything but an average-contrast composition.
Jake,
Do you have time to go to the church before the wedding and shoot a few rolls of film of your wife at the wedding location from where you think you will be sitting? That could answer a number of questions for you.
Steve
You know, I wasn't thinking of XP-2 initially, but it can be an excellent choice if you have enough light to work with. The latitude is enormous compared to traditional B&W films, and it prints very easily onto standard variable contrast papers. As far as it not looking "traditional", that's bunk. You can make it look any way you want when you print the negatives. Processing is as easy as taking it to your local photo finisher and having them run it through the exact same process as any other color print film. No muss, no fuss, reasonably priced, and, provided the lab is reasonably careful, you get the same results every time. If your local lab does shoddy work, then you have a problem and it's time to find one that does good work.
Something to keep in mind, IME Tmax films are very tolerant to over exposure, but do not take well at all to underexposure.
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