Hi all,
Ive been shooting Ilford Ortho and Tmax 400 interchangibly for a while. And often when shooting landscapes Ive found Tmax 400 to be sharper then Ortho, especially on subjects in the distance. However... I did a massive film test for grade 2 and 3 to try and figure out what kind of films I actually like (using a Pentax 67ii), and again ended up with these two films. And again when I compared distant subjects Tmax 400 would appear sharper (aperture would be the same, but not shutter speed - also shot on tripod). Based om this I assumed that films seeing more blue would appear less sharp on distant subjects then films not seeing as much blue. However, I then shot two 35mm rolls (one of each film) using two cameras and one lens. Same aperture, different shutter speeds, and hand held. Now however, they seemed equally as sharp. This puzzles me.
And I guess my question is if the spectral sensitivity actually would affect perceived sharpness, particularly for distant subjects?
Cheers
Peter
Ive been shooting Ilford Ortho and Tmax 400 interchangibly for a while. And often when shooting landscapes Ive found Tmax 400 to be sharper then Ortho, especially on subjects in the distance. However... I did a massive film test for grade 2 and 3 to try and figure out what kind of films I actually like (using a Pentax 67ii), and again ended up with these two films. And again when I compared distant subjects Tmax 400 would appear sharper (aperture would be the same, but not shutter speed - also shot on tripod). Based om this I assumed that films seeing more blue would appear less sharp on distant subjects then films not seeing as much blue. However, I then shot two 35mm rolls (one of each film) using two cameras and one lens. Same aperture, different shutter speeds, and hand held. Now however, they seemed equally as sharp. This puzzles me.
And I guess my question is if the spectral sensitivity actually would affect perceived sharpness, particularly for distant subjects?
Cheers
Peter