I've just never warmed to it. I suppose if I worked at it I could get nice reusults, but when Ilford is half the price and gives me what I want, I don't have a lot of incentive to try and like T Max!
Somewhat surprisingly, probably my best print is from a 35mm neg on HP5. I have 3 framed 11x14 prints on my wall, all side by side. One is a 35mm HP5 neg, one is 6x9 Delta 400 and the final one is 4x5" Delta 100.After years of LF and MF, I'm finding myself using more 35mm again....& TMX has given me very smooth prints in 11" x14"
Somewhat surprisingly, probably my best print is from a 35mm neg on HP5. I have 3 framed 11x14 prints on my wall, all side by side. One is a 35mm HP5 neg, one is 6x9 Delta 400 and the final one is 4x5" Delta 100.
I've had a number of experienced photographers look at them and so far nobody had been able to guess the formats correctly. The stars aligned that day for the 35mm exposure, it's beautiful tone and virtually grainless.
Thank you for bringing light quality up. It is a problem that affects most sensitometers.How are you making the exposures? Acros II is orthopancromatic which means you're going to get very different results depending on your light source. My results (that I published over in the resources section, somebody else has already linked to it in this thread) show a very different ISO performance, but I used a full spectrum daylight source. If your light source is tungsten based (or in that same range) or just doesn't have a lot of blue in it, you'll get different behavior. In my experience, full panchromatic films respond much the same no matter the light source, at least the difference is small enough it could be chalked up to statistical error, but other films that have responses that aren't full panchromatic tend to exhibit different behavior depending on the spectrum of the light.
I guess there's no accounting for what moves us.
It is because each of us has a different vision of what we are trying to achieve with our prints.
I'm gunshy on Tri-X. I had a bulk roll and it reticulated badly. I developed a roll of HP5 and a roll of Tri-X in the same Paterson tank and the Kodak reticulated and the Ilford was fine. I've avoided Tri-X after that.
I've used it up a long time ago. However I was able to obtain some of the Efke Varycon (as Adox Vario Classic) paper last year which still prints great, but it is no Emaks. Emaks was a great subtle paper but I didn't like it selenium toned as it went plum / aubergine fairly quickly.Gosh, miha. You've still got some EMaks? I have about 60 sheets of Gr 2 glossy 20X24, and got worried if it was still good, so printed some 6X9 Tmax shots on it last week (nominal 16X20 size plus a nice-sized test strip off the edge), with wonderful results. 130 glycin developer. I sure miss those classic graded papers. EMaks has a subtlety to the tonality one just doesn't get with VC papers, plus a wonderful understated subtle warm glow, although one has to be careful toning it, because it tones so fast.
@warden I feel I need to say again how much I like the print of the tree. It's a bare, withered tree, possibly dead, but the luminous print brings it back to life. There's a similar tree near where I live. I've been trying to photograph it for some time, but it stubbornly keeps looking like an ordinary dead tree![]()
(old TMX negative, incident metering, Leica & 35mm Summicron....print on Foma Variant, Ansco 130.. 11x14" print
How are you making the exposures? Acros II is orthopancromatic which means you're going to get very different results depending on your light source. My results (that I published over in the resources section, somebody else has already linked to it in this thread) show a very different ISO performance, but I used a full spectrum daylight source. If your light source is tungsten based (or in that same range) or just doesn't have a lot of blue in it, you'll get different behavior. In my experience, full panchromatic films respond much the same no matter the light source, at least the difference is small enough it could be chalked up to statistical error, but other films that have responses that aren't full panchromatic tend to exhibit different behavior depending on the spectrum of the light.
Can you please explain what orthopancromatic is? I thought a film was either ortho or panchromatic, but not both.
Frankly, I can't be bothered to find out. Ilford gives me what I want, its price point is far more attractive than Kodak and it's easily and locally available.There is simply something wrong with either your exposure technique or developer choice, or both, if you're not finding that out for yourself.
Great shot, thanks for sharing it!
Glad to hear you're doing fine, Adrian. I hope to get out this afternoon (with TMax of course), but still have to be choosy about which trails, since there's a lot of downfall in some places, and a lot of miserably sticky muddy goop in others.
Check out Lina Bessonova, very informative clip on different film types.
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B&W FIlm Types - Ortho / Orthopan / Panchro / Superpanchromatic — Lina Bessonova
An easy, comprehensive guide to decoding all the graphs and terminology in the black-and-white films' datasheets. We are looking into spectral sensitivity related to analog photography. Orthochromatic, orthopanchromatic, panchromatic and superpanchromatic (infrared) - what is the practical differewww.linabessonova.photography
I am curious as to what kind of light source your sensitometer uses. Perhaps it can be adapted to a commercially available medical model, such as those made by X-Rite, and thus solve the light source problem once and for all. When I was researching light sources a while back, I found that it was difficult to obtain a true full-spectrum performance, i.e., with a an even spectral distribution, from currently available sources, without a significant cost.
Can you please explain what orthopancromatic is? I thought a film was either ortho or panchromatic, but not both.
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