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.