4rolls of 6x9 were shot Saturday. The first was PanF50 in a zeiss Ikon 515/2 f4.5. It was Edgewood Day Fair and shadows were black under tent booths in the bright sun. Sunny 16 was used. 1/50 f16, yet, after the film was developed that night, there was no high contrast in it. There is massive detail in darks, what I thought would be pure white negative. Awesome.
Delta 100 did the same thing. Lots of soft gray detail- everywhere. 1/100 f16 for most shots.
Every shot turned out to be good.
FP4 has more contrast in the negatives than the other two do. But still massive detail in what should be underexposed areas. I thought.
They all were developed according to normal directions. 68 degrees in D-76 1:1.
This is a wholly unexpected result.
Not that I'm displeased, mind you. Just really surprised.
The last 2 rolls were shot in a Voigtlander Bessa. One shot was a portrait at 6 feet focus, wide open, f3.5 under a tent and the background is not black outside on the negative. There is lots of blurry detail there. Focus was good enough to resolve individual hairs on the head.
These films really suck in detail in dark areas when exposed for bright light!

my blog has all of the pictures on the page called Edgewood day.
http://studiocarter.com/?p=490
Delta 100 did the same thing. Lots of soft gray detail- everywhere. 1/100 f16 for most shots.
Every shot turned out to be good.
FP4 has more contrast in the negatives than the other two do. But still massive detail in what should be underexposed areas. I thought.
They all were developed according to normal directions. 68 degrees in D-76 1:1.
This is a wholly unexpected result.
Not that I'm displeased, mind you. Just really surprised.
The last 2 rolls were shot in a Voigtlander Bessa. One shot was a portrait at 6 feet focus, wide open, f3.5 under a tent and the background is not black outside on the negative. There is lots of blurry detail there. Focus was good enough to resolve individual hairs on the head.
These films really suck in detail in dark areas when exposed for bright light!

my blog has all of the pictures on the page called Edgewood day.
http://studiocarter.com/?p=490
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My experience is that my oldest Compur shutters are some of he more accurate leaf shutter I have, I've found modern Copal shutters are more prone to running slower. A lot of course depends on the amount of use a shutters had and the state of its lubrication.


