I didn't use a sensitometer. I used a strobe and incident meter to expose a grey card and controlled the exposure for each step with a transmission calibrated lens, then put a roll of film that I wanted to test into the camera, filled the frame with the grey card so that there'd be no flair, set the lens to infinity focus, then step up and down the aperture range at each transmission stop. Strobes are about as full spectrum as you can get. I put all the details in the published resource.
TMX, 120 yellow filter, Plaubel 670, 11x14" print on Ilford Classic... no problems with shadow detail
There really are no right and wrong opinions. Obviously more modern films are "technically" better if you want fine grain and sharpness.
Personally I've always liked grain. Even before I knew what I was doing I shot a roll of Delta 400 and immediately didn't like it. For many years I shot Fuji Neopan 1600 and developed it in Rodinal. I kind of bemoan the fact that films have been improved too much for my liking. I prefer higher speed films when I'm shooting 35mm because of the grain. I've always had a weird thing with Kodak black and white films for some reason. We just don't get along. I've seen many images that were gorgeous on Tri-X for example but I generally get mushy negs from it. HP5 on the other hand is a piece of cake.
As an aside, the most "technically" perfect negs that have ever gone through any of my cameras were with Fuji's original Acros taken with a modern Zeiss lens and developed in Pyrocat-P. Pretty amazing from that technical viewpoint. Only problem with them is they are impossible to focus in the darkroom.
I’m curious what people think of the dim view of t-grain films taken by Troop and Anchell in the Film Developing Cookbook (1998), pp. 14–15. In an aside, they call them “inferior” and chalk them up to the need to reduce silver content by penny-pinching manufacturers. That seems a bit hyperbolic since in the main text they point out that t-grain films offer finer grain and better sharpness/higher resolution. (See the higher resolution figures for t-grain films than conventional films posted by Henning Serger on this forum.) Still, T&A point out that this requires trade-offs, some already mentioned here: t-grain films require more exacting control of time and temperature in development and have less latitude for underexposure (and overexposure?). But I was interested in their claim that another trade-off is that the flatter-but-larger shape of tabular grain increases micro contrast at the cost of “smooth gradation of fine highlight detail” found in more classic films. Of course, the latter is harder (impossible?) to measure; the curves published here show macro contrast. But is this trade-off something experienced photographers have noticed?
I’m just getting back into film, and am drawn to Tri-X—perhaps partly because that was what I used when I first learned the art, as a kid, now many years ago—and I think Kentmere 400 looks great. (Of course, Tri-X is no longer the same either: Anchell laments the loss of older, gritty, cubic grain to the new Tri-X made of “semi-flat grain film with color-dye sensitizers” in Darkroom Cookbook [2012], p. 36.) The linear curve of TMX produces a wide, lovely range of tones evidenced by some of the examples posted here, but I have shied away from TMX so far because I’m interested in film as a change from the digital look of a grain-free, linear response with quick-to-clip (or blow-out) highlights. Is the preference for conventional grain just a sentimental attachment to the analog noise of film grain, as an escape from the digital grid? Or is it also that films with more of a shoulder to the curve handle highlights and overexposure more gracefully (which I see as a real benefit of film)? And can we see real differences in micro contrast, fine highlight detail, gradation, etc., between the different film types, as T&A claim? (They recommend overexposing by up to 2 stops and underdeveloping by 20–30% to reduce micro contrast and improve the gradation of t-grain films.)
It is interesting to hear some prefer Delta 100, which, according to Anchell and Troop’s description, has a slightly more conventional grain shape than TMX, even as others hold out TMX as the technically “superior” film (according to measurements of film speed, finer grain, etc.).
Processed in staining developers, i haven't found highlights quick to blow out at all.
I am afraid I am not a landscape photography connoisseur, so I can't give you an opinion on the subject matter or composition, but the print quality is outstanding. It looks like you captured well over 7 EV worth of light, and, yet you have somehow managed to contract the tonal range where necessary and expand it where necessary, creating a perfectly balanced print. I bet it looks amazing in person.
Please don't think I am being pedantic, but I have learned from discussions in this forum that there is a difference between 'grain' and 'granularity', and in this thread we probably need to be clear which we are talking about.I’m curious what people think of the dim view of t-grain films taken by Troop and Anchell in the Film Developing Cookbook (1998), pp. 14–15. In an aside, they call them “inferior” and chalk them up to the need to reduce silver content by penny-pinching manufacturers. That seems a bit hyperbolic since in the main text they point out that t-grain films offer finer grain and better sharpness/higher resolution. (See the higher resolution figures for t-grain films than conventional films posted by Henning Serger on this forum.) Still, T&A point out that this requires trade-offs, some already mentioned here: t-grain films require more exacting control of time and temperature in development and have less latitude for underexposure (and overexposure?). But I was interested in their claim that another trade-off is that the flatter-but-larger shape of tabular grain increases micro contrast at the cost of “smooth gradation of fine highlight detail” found in more classic films. Of course, the latter is harder (impossible?) to measure; the curves published here show macro contrast. But is this trade-off something experienced photographers have noticed?
The preference for grain is at least partially explained by our affinity for the perception of "sharpness". "Sharpness" is as much subjective as objective, and relates most closely to our ability to perceive edges of detail. If there is little or no grain, it is more difficult to perceive edges. Film with more grain can't resolve as much detail as film with less grain, but the additional grain can make things look more pleasing.
The Anchell and Troop complaints about the T-Max films strike me as entertaining, because the things they (or perhaps just Anchell) complain about are essentially the same things that one observes if one just uses larger film formats.
Please don't think I am being pedantic, but I have learned from discussions in this forum that there is a difference between 'grain' and 'granularity', and in this thread we probably need to be clear which we are talking about.
Someone please correct me if I have this wrong: I understand granularity to be the clumped appearance in 2D of grains that in reality are distributed in 3D within the emulsion. So it must reflect the size, shape, consistency of grains, and their dispersion within the emulsion. Granularity is what we notice in prints. But even a 20x16 print from a 35mm negative is only a 14x enlargement - you need much higher magnification to see the grains, which are the individual crystals of silver halide.
It's the individual grains that are flatter in T-grain emulsions. It's not obvious to me what effect that would have on granularity, or smooth gradation of tones. Anyone have any insights?
Tabular films supposedly scan better than regular silver films.
Thank you for pointing it out. That's probably true. My old scanner, however, shows terrible banding artifacts with smooth, grain-free films like the Acros II, but it is the scanner's fault, not the film's.
I’m curious what people think of the dim view of t-grain films taken by Troop and Anchell in the Film Developing Cookbook (1998), pp. 14–15. In an aside, they call them “inferior” and chalk them up to the need to reduce silver content by penny-pinching manufacturers. That seems a bit hyperbolic since in the main text they point out that t-grain films offer finer grain and better sharpness/higher resolution. (See the higher resolution figures for t-grain films than conventional films posted by Henning Serger on this forum.) Still, T&A point out that this requires trade-offs, some already mentioned here: t-grain films require more exacting control of time and temperature in development and have less latitude for underexposure (and overexposure?). But I was interested in their claim that another trade-off is that the flatter-but-larger shape of tabular grain increases micro contrast at the cost of “smooth gradation of fine highlight detail” found in more classic films. Of course, the latter is harder (impossible?) to measure; the curves published here show macro contrast. But is this trade-off something experienced photographers have noticed?
I’m just getting back into film, and am drawn to Tri-X—perhaps partly because that was what I used when I first learned the art, as a kid, now many years ago—and I think Kentmere 400 looks great. (Of course, Tri-X is no longer the same either: Anchell laments the loss of older, gritty, cubic grain to the new Tri-X made of “semi-flat grain film with color-dye sensitizers” in Darkroom Cookbook [2012], p. 36.) The linear curve of TMX produces a wide, lovely range of tones evidenced by some of the examples posted here, but I have shied away from TMX so far because I’m interested in film as a change from the digital look of a grain-free, linear response with quick-to-clip (or blow-out) highlights. Is the preference for conventional grain just a sentimental attachment to the analog noise of film grain, as an escape from the digital grid? Or is it also that films with more of a shoulder to the curve handle highlights and overexposure more gracefully (which I see as a real benefit of film)? And can we see real differences in micro contrast, fine highlight detail, gradation, etc., between the different film types, as T&A claim? (They recommend overexposing by up to 2 stops and underdeveloping by 20–30% to reduce micro contrast and improve the gradation of t-grain films.)
It is interesting to hear some prefer Delta 100, which, according to Anchell and Troop’s description, has a slightly more conventional grain shape than TMX, even as others hold out TMX as the technically “superior” film (according to measurements of film speed, finer grain, etc.).
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