nickandre
Member
What is it with everyone and fast speed films? What advantage do they give you? Fuji still references it's 100 as a medium speed film but that's the slowest print film they've got! Why would anyone want a 64 ASA Kodachrome over a 25 ASA when you get better quality moving from one slow speed to another? I love slow speed films, but they're getting chopped one by one in favor of 800 speed films that you have to stop down to F22 or 1/4000 to make use of. At least my photo paper has an ASA of 8. I swear I'm going to get a 400' roll of that in 3.5 inches and run that through my 122 roll film camera.
One would think that as people lost interest in films the high speeds would get the ax because all the consumers used the 800 speed for their zooms. One would think that all the nice high quality professional films with fine grain that happened to be slow would stay around because people want the quality and don't need 80 times the speed. I don't think anybody not shooting a tele-zoom would need above 100 ASA. Sure in the dark or for people when there's action you might want a fast film, but you lose the quality with that so one would only use that when necessary or else use ye old tripod. All the photographers shoot 50 ASA velvia but there's like one film left that slow in B+W. All the people shooting landscapes have NO REASON to need a film faster than 25 ASA (ok, you might lose the tree sway, one might argue it's less distracting if blurred over a longer period of time for 30' compared to 1').
If I had been over 8 years old when they were still running Royal Gold 25 I would have shot that. I want to have grain-less prints in the darkroom not have to stop down to F22 in camera to get grainy color garbage for 800 speed films.
I swear that april fools panatomic X run thread almost had me out of my mind. Not funny. I've seen all the pictures from my grandmother on that stuff and it was amazing. Unless someone has some Ektar 25 and Panatomic X on hand they are desperate to give to me I think I'm stuck. What can you do?
PS-Anyone tried EFKE 25? PanF?
I don't know why I wrote this...
One would think that as people lost interest in films the high speeds would get the ax because all the consumers used the 800 speed for their zooms. One would think that all the nice high quality professional films with fine grain that happened to be slow would stay around because people want the quality and don't need 80 times the speed. I don't think anybody not shooting a tele-zoom would need above 100 ASA. Sure in the dark or for people when there's action you might want a fast film, but you lose the quality with that so one would only use that when necessary or else use ye old tripod. All the photographers shoot 50 ASA velvia but there's like one film left that slow in B+W. All the people shooting landscapes have NO REASON to need a film faster than 25 ASA (ok, you might lose the tree sway, one might argue it's less distracting if blurred over a longer period of time for 30' compared to 1').
If I had been over 8 years old when they were still running Royal Gold 25 I would have shot that. I want to have grain-less prints in the darkroom not have to stop down to F22 in camera to get grainy color garbage for 800 speed films.
I swear that april fools panatomic X run thread almost had me out of my mind. Not funny. I've seen all the pictures from my grandmother on that stuff and it was amazing. Unless someone has some Ektar 25 and Panatomic X on hand they are desperate to give to me I think I'm stuck. What can you do?
PS-Anyone tried EFKE 25? PanF?
I don't know why I wrote this...