Zedwardson
Member
- Joined
- Jul 7, 2014
- Messages
- 102
- Format
- 35mm
Meaning, that gentleman don't belong to 'Church of Rodinal'
Developers that are not Rodinal, Hersey!
Meaning, that gentleman don't belong to 'Church of Rodinal'
They are not the same. But if TRIX is widely know to be "the best", then HP5 is surely the best, also.
...Especially after I learned to give HP5+ a bit more developing time than I expected to.
They are not the same. But if TRIX is widely know to be "the best", then HP5 is surely the best, also.
The results of this test fit my prejudices, which is that there's no use chasing the best when most everything is 90% good.
Thanks for posting, Brian. If you obsess over the little differences too much, it gets in the way of picture making. Anybody who thinks you need to capitalize on the small differences between these two emulsions I feel is artfully missing the point about what's important in photography - the photographs are either interesting or they're not. No film is going to change that. Only how you use it.
I don't like Tri-X in Rodinal either, much nicer in ID11/D76. OTOH slower films mostly look gorgeous in Rodinal.
I've been mulling over this Tri-x vs. HP5 thing since my favorite beloved film Neopan 400 (RIP) was rudely discontinued. I've always enjoyed HP5's grittiness, sharpness and speed. But my Tri-x SCANS (keyword, SCANS) have always sparkled in a way that HP5 doesn't. So I finally decided to run a simple test since my best work does get wet printed. I put a roll of each in each of my Mamiya 6 bodies and spent a day this past winter shooting the exact same shot taken just seconds apart with each film. Both films were shot at EI 250. Exposure was determined by a Pentax digital spot meter. Both were developed in ID-11 diluted 1:1. Tri-x for 10 minutes, HP5 for 13 minutes. The resulting negatives were contact printed and here are the results. I believe they speak for themselves. I was shocked to say the least.
Hopefully this will help others who are the way I used to be, constantly searching for the magic bullet, believing there were huge differences between films.
HiRod![]()
Just going back to the original post, taking note of how the tests were done and viewing the results I reckon that a mistake was made right at the start. The ISO of 250 may be what suits the Tri-X but looking at the photographs (in particular those of the brooms and their shadows) surely those with the HP5 Plus are over-exposed? Maybe if the tests had been made with what has proved by your test to be the best ISO and development regime for the Tri-X and the best ISO and development regime for the HP5 Plus you would have ended up with a more representative set of results?
RR
HiRod
No it is a good test for Kodak groupies who are faced with prospect of no option but HP5+ cause Foma and Adox 'rubbish' and Fuji only a memory.
When you think the only option is a x100 or HP5+ it is reassuring that the HP5+ not detectably different in blind tests on 16x20 from 135 Trix off a tripod.
A better test would be the other 400 ISO films against HP5+ with test chart, H&D, and enlarged grain field. But that would be lost on the 'arts' part of the team.
But your point is valid for shadows HP5+ has a softer toe than most other films and you can recover more shadow detail normally, but I donno about Trix400.
Noel
Oh I hadn't considered that, although the thread admittedly did become very "American" with the usual blindness towards anything not from a yellow box. I read the OP as feeling that both films made such similar results it was a shock to him. I simply reckon that the HP5 Plus that I know and love could do much better if allowed to...
RR
HiRod
No it is a good test for Kodak groupies who are faced with prospect of no option but HP5+ cause Foma and Adox 'rubbish' and Fuji only a memory.
Pot, kettle, black
You're basically saying that Kodak "groupies" are silly but Ilford fanboys are cool.
How?
Xmas, out of curiosity, how many rolls (36 equiv.) do you burn in a week/moth, do you print most of them?
Photrio.com contains affiliate links to products. We may receive a commission for purchases made through these links. To read our full affiliate disclosure statement please click Here. |
PHOTRIO PARTNERS EQUALLY FUNDING OUR COMMUNITY: ![]() |