Interesting comparison, and I applaud you for doing it and posting it here, but in my mind I'm thinking, ah, if only things were this simple! The deal is, if you take Tri-X and develop it in a particular developer in it's OPTIMAL manner (and this can only be found by trying it several ways), and do the same w/ the HP5, you still don't have much as far as a base.
What may be an optimal developer for Tri-X is not one for HP5. I can look at my Tri-X negs that were developed in Rodinal (boy, a little grainy there, but really nice grain), in D76 or TD11 (wow, great tonality, but not the sharpest) and Acufine (sharp as the dickens, but not the same tonality as the previous developer) and the only consensus I can get is that they're all different. And we haven't even thrown HP5 into the equation, nor the fact that one film may look better w/ a little under exposure, while the other may work better at box speed.
As for the scan thing, it's an internet forum, so something is gonna have to be scanned or we can't see it. Scanned prints or just scanned negatives, it doesn't matter, we're all at the mercy of post processing and individual monitor calibration. Ideally we'd all be looking at the prints in person, but that isn't going to happen. Even then.....you can print one neg a LOT of different ways to get very different results.
What may be an optimal developer for Tri-X is not one for HP5. I can look at my Tri-X negs that were developed in Rodinal (boy, a little grainy there, but really nice grain), in D76 or TD11 (wow, great tonality, but not the sharpest) and Acufine (sharp as the dickens, but not the same tonality as the previous developer) and the only consensus I can get is that they're all different. And we haven't even thrown HP5 into the equation, nor the fact that one film may look better w/ a little under exposure, while the other may work better at box speed.
As for the scan thing, it's an internet forum, so something is gonna have to be scanned or we can't see it. Scanned prints or just scanned negatives, it doesn't matter, we're all at the mercy of post processing and individual monitor calibration. Ideally we'd all be looking at the prints in person, but that isn't going to happen. Even then.....you can print one neg a LOT of different ways to get very different results.
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