removedacct1
Member
I'll post this under Pinhole stuff, since in this specific instance I am using the Rollei IR film in one of my pinhole cameras.
I will first state that I have been using infrared and red-extended emulsions since the early 1980s, when I was shooting the Kodak HIE 35mm (what a wonderful film that was!), so I pretty much know what's what when it comes to using filters with these films, etc. However, I got an unpleasant surprise yesterday when I shot a roll of Rollei IR 120 in one of my pinhole cameras, with a Lee Polyester 87 filter: I got no exposure on the roll whatsoever. My understanding is that the Rollei emulsion is sensitive to 820nm, and the Lee 87 filter states right on it that its begins transmission at 730nm and further. With that combination, I assumed there would be sufficient overlap to get reasonable exposures, but I got nada! (It wasn't my processing that went wrong; the rebate numbers developed as expected) I metered the scenes at 3ASA and then bracketed up to 2 stops over (sunlight scenes, exposed up to 18 minutes), so there ought to have been some exposure occur.
If I have missed or misinterpreted something, its not obvious to me what that is. If you have experience in this area, can you please advise me? I suspect that although the film + filter specs suggest compatibility, they aren't really.
Thanks,
Paul
I will first state that I have been using infrared and red-extended emulsions since the early 1980s, when I was shooting the Kodak HIE 35mm (what a wonderful film that was!), so I pretty much know what's what when it comes to using filters with these films, etc. However, I got an unpleasant surprise yesterday when I shot a roll of Rollei IR 120 in one of my pinhole cameras, with a Lee Polyester 87 filter: I got no exposure on the roll whatsoever. My understanding is that the Rollei emulsion is sensitive to 820nm, and the Lee 87 filter states right on it that its begins transmission at 730nm and further. With that combination, I assumed there would be sufficient overlap to get reasonable exposures, but I got nada! (It wasn't my processing that went wrong; the rebate numbers developed as expected) I metered the scenes at 3ASA and then bracketed up to 2 stops over (sunlight scenes, exposed up to 18 minutes), so there ought to have been some exposure occur.
If I have missed or misinterpreted something, its not obvious to me what that is. If you have experience in this area, can you please advise me? I suspect that although the film + filter specs suggest compatibility, they aren't really.
Thanks,
Paul