snusmumriken
Subscriber
In the last year or so I've been experimenting with Kodak/Eastman Double-X. I like it in many ways, but in some ways it frustrates me. So I fell to wondering how it compares with more familiar films in terms of spectral sensitivity. Here are the spectral sensitivity curves as presented by Kodak and Ilford in their technical data sheets.
My first question is whether the curves are even comparable between the two manufacturers? Do they use equivalent methodologies? I'm not interested in the vertical scale, of course, just in relative sensitivity of each film across the visible spectrum.
If they are comparable, it looks as though HP5+ and (especially) FP4+ are a lot less sensitive (relatively) to the violet/blue end of the spectrum than are Tri-X and Double-X. Is that correct?
And if that is the case, what are the practical consequences? Does it mean that the two Kodak films will make shadows more luminous and pick out more shadow detail in them? Will the Kodak films show a more marked response to filters than the Ilford films, or vice versa?
My first question is whether the curves are even comparable between the two manufacturers? Do they use equivalent methodologies? I'm not interested in the vertical scale, of course, just in relative sensitivity of each film across the visible spectrum.
If they are comparable, it looks as though HP5+ and (especially) FP4+ are a lot less sensitive (relatively) to the violet/blue end of the spectrum than are Tri-X and Double-X. Is that correct?
And if that is the case, what are the practical consequences? Does it mean that the two Kodak films will make shadows more luminous and pick out more shadow detail in them? Will the Kodak films show a more marked response to filters than the Ilford films, or vice versa?