Shot ISO 160 film as ISO 400, should I trash it?

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haring

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Please don't laugh!

I have shot two rolls of 35mm ISO 160 film last week. The camera was set to ISO 400, should I trash the two rolls? Is sending it to the lab a waste of money?

Thanks!
 

MattKing

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Which film?

What sort of light - flash, contrasty sun, high overcast, ... ??

What sort of subject - portraits, product shots, landscapes, birthday parties?
 

Klainmeister

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In my experience, unless it's slide film, it should be fine. 1-2 stop underexposure won't kill color negative film...in fact, might make it quite saturated depending on the film itself.
 
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haring

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Which film?

What sort of light - flash, contrasty sun, high overcast, ... ??

What sort of subject - portraits, product shots, landscapes, birthday parties?

You are right... Here you are:Fuji 400H, 35mm. No flash. I have used them during an engagement session. Shadow, no contrasty sun.
 

Athiril

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You are right... Here you are:Fuji 400H, 35mm. No flash. I have used them during an engagement session. Shadow, no contrasty sun.

You mean Fuji Pro 160S?

It may very well deliver better results than 400H @ 400 anyway :tongue:
 

chamon88

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Why you don't ask the lab to push them +1 stop , recently at our lab we devlop portra 160 push +2 1/2 stop with
very good result contrast go up a bit.

Thanks Chamon
 

thegman

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Why you don't ask the lab to push them +1 stop , recently at our lab we devlop portra 160 push +2 1/2 stop with
very good result contrast go up a bit.

Thanks Chamon

Agree, a +1 stop push is nothing really, a good lab should be able to do this.
 

Felinik

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I join the choir here, get them pushed +1 in development and you'll probably be happily surprised how good it looks!

:smile:


Some time ago I shot a cpl of rolls APX 100, thinking it was HP5+ 400, on EI 1600 (they came from an unmarked bulk loader and the previous owner told me it was HP5+ in it)..

When I found out I had not yet developed the rolls and managed to actually at least get something on almost all frames, I'm not saying I'd recommend this, but I'm sure there's a bunch of people who'd call the pictures great modern art....

:D
 

j.c.denton

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I've been shooting Potra 160 in 35mm at ISO 800 and let the lab do only +1 push development, meaning development at ISO 320. So underexposure was comparable. I took shots of a music events and some on an automotive exhibition. The negs came back a bit dark, but nothing that a good scanner could not handle.

Your shots will probably be fine even if you do not compensate for it in development.

Christian
 

David Lyga

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You underexposed by a full two stops. (I consider 160 film to REALLY be 100 film.) Thus you need to over develop by about 25% - 33%, or a bit more. You will attain decent highlights but shadow detail will be pitiful. But, honestly, you should have little problems with color-crossover and might be surprised with how great your highlights look. Midtones will be OK but not ideal. - David Lyga
 

MattKing

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A push development will increase the contrast, but won't make any meaningful difference with respect to shadow detail.

If the nature of the light and the subject are such that an increase in contrast might help, then go ahead and order a one stop "push".

If, however, your shots include a lot of highlight flesh tones and human features, you may prefer to leave the contrast unchanged, knowing that the "near shadows" will lack contrast.
 
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