Cool beans! That's good to know. It's hard to beat the price of Kentmere/Ultrafine (specially if I start loading bulk film).
True enough about the Freestyle shipping cost. But I still send a fair bit of business to Freestryle. I view it as a premium I'm willing to pay for their commitment to film photography.I regularly see bulk rolls of .EDU films for about the same price as Ultrafine Extreme -- and it's worth knowing that B&H carries .EDU Ultra, and it's just enough for a bulk roll to qualify for free shipping ($50 minimum) -- which means in total it's several dollars cheaper to buy Freestyle's house brand film from B&H...![]()
True enough about the Freestyle shipping cost. But I still send a fair bit of business to Freestryle. I view it as a premium I'm willing to pay for their commitment to film photography.
Cool!Kodak Hawkeye Surveillance 2215 (400 @ 400) T-grain in DK50. I dilute the dev 1+9 and use the times for FX55. I have no reason, but it works.![]()
http://www.ipernity.com/doc/608655/44843822//in/album/981964
Very cool. Looks like plenty of shadow detail at ei 400...Tmax 400 shot at ISO400:
35mm: Removing ground brush with fire - 35mm Tmax 400 | Flickr
4x5: Craig House 2 | Chamonix 45H-1, 90mm, Tmax 400, Epson V850 S… | Flickr
My goal is to find an E.I. 400 35mm film that can handle a shot like this without blocking up the shadows or blowing the highlights. For what it's worth, this is a bright white surfboard in late morning Texas sun, so the exposure latitude here is pretty big. I have some Kentmere 400 on hand, so I'll have to try it and see if it can match the performance of its 100 sibling at box speed.
My goal is to find an E.I. 400 35mm film that can handle a shot like this without blocking up the shadows or blowing the highlights.
That was helpful. Thanks!I think exposure and development are really the key regardless of which film you choose. Tri-X, HP5, Kentmere, Foma, they're all good products. But I did just buy a 100' roll of HP5, so that's my answer.
Any of Tri-X, HP5+, TMax 400 or Delta 400 will do this just fine. And you don't need any 'special' developers using a poisonous ingredient (pyrogallol) that you really shouldn't be using unless you absolutely need to.
I normally shoot them at 200, but if I had a need for 400 or 500, I would not hesitate to use either HP5 or Delta 400. Or Tri-X, for that matter.
Rodinal would not be my first choice, I would probably pick HC-110, or PC-glycol for homebrew. I don't know about PMK.
I'm a big fan of T-Max 400, which I generally meter at 400, using incident metering when I can.
Scanned from a toned 11x14 print made from a 6x4.5 negative:
Yeah, I recently pushed TriX to 1600 by stand developing with Rodinal with good results. It's certainly doable, but you do lose shadow detail (as you do with any push). I'm placing my hopes on 510 Pyro to deliver true box speed with Kentmere or HP5. We'll see how that goesEither Delta 400 or hp5+ in DDX, though I prefer the latter pushed 1 stop.
Used to use tri-x and neopan 400 from 400-1600 in Rodinal ages ago with usually good success.
I mis Neopan 400, that was a GREAT 400 speed film.Either Delta 400 or hp5+ in DDX, though I prefer the latter pushed 1 stop.
Used to use tri-x and neopan 400 from 400-1600 in Rodinal ages ago with usually good success.
Ditto.I mis Neopan 400, that was a GREAT 400 speed film.
Hey all,
Since I'm still fresh in my return to film, and the range of available film stocks seems quite different from what I remember, I'm curious: what (if any) B&W films in production today are you shooting at E.I. 400 or so?
Kodak TriX and Ilford HP5 at EI 320 in D76 1+1 work for me.
It's not hard to find what 400 iso options are available, but I expect that most should be shot at E.I. 200 or lower, and I'd love to have something that can reliably be shot at 400 or 500 (the upper limit for my "new" Yashica Electro 35 CC).
Bonus points if you can name a film that achieves that E.I. with rodinal or pmk (or 510 pyro).
Would that E.I be better achieved by pulling Delta 3200?
Thanks,
André
Dear Andre,So, I had a chance to give Kentmere 400 a try. I rated it at 400 on my Yashica Electro 35 CC, and burned through a 24 exposure roll trying to get a decent shot of my brother's dog. I developed it in PMK 1:2:100 (for 9'20" in 75 degrees Farenheit), as that developer seems to give me box speed for Kentmere 100. I meant to try this in 510 Pyro, but before I knew it I was measuring out the PMK...
I took a few outdoor shots, and those came out nicely exposed. Here's a sample outside shot (not a good picture, but it does seem to show that it is well exposed, with good detail in sun lit and shaded areas):
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Most of my indoor shots, however, are underexposed. Here's one of the very few indoor shots that came out well (enough) exposed:
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I wonder if the issue is not that the film did not deliver box speed, but rather that my camera's CdS meter is reading warmer indoor lighting as stronger than it should (the well exposed indoor shots had a fair bit of window lighting). Be that as it may, for my camera and developer Kentmere 400 does seem to deliver box speed in daylight, but seems closer to EI 200 indoors.
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