Ektagraphic
Member
I am yet to buy a roll of Gold 800 to shoot other than shooting it in a disposible....I wonder if one can get good results with it.
I have a couple of rolls and I haven't shot any yet....Good film you say? I am excited to work with it because I have seen a couple of nice shots taken on it. I wish they offered it in 120. This appears to be the ultimate film. Kodak's data said that it can be push processed to ISO 25,000![]()
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That's a lot higer than digital can go
I wonder what grain looks like there.
Actually I think that "really 400 film" thought, is an urban myth.
It can't be a push in a practical sense because the process at any normal mini-lab is standard.
To qualify as a push ya-gotta change the process time.
The majority of single-use cameras are loaded with 800 speed film, and I would imagine that Kodak and Fuji are both still selling tons of those things, so some type of 800 speed film will be around for quite awhile.
The 400 speed film is exposed at 800 and DX coded as such. So when they enter the 800 DX into the machine, the film exposed at 800 is processed at 800, not intentionally pushed. However, anyone can fool a stupid machine with a homemade black and silver checkerboard configured in just the right way.
Gets processed the same. But if you processed ISO 800 C-41 at the time required for ISO50, wouldn't you get grossly overdeveloped negs? Time's kinda gotta matter IMHO.
I would think that C-41 would be more difficult than B&W rather than almost foolproof as indicated by the apparent versatility. Just tkes more steps, more time and more space. But is it really that much more foolproof? Just asking for discussion sake. Thanks for this. Really good discussion going here. Sorry, OT.
The next myth is that color chemicals are more expensive and they expire quickly.
Fuji and Kodak are not the sole manufacturers of ISO 800 CN films!
As hrst already indicated there is still Ferrania 800 CN at offer (though production might be cancelled).
And there is Agfa who manufacture a 800 CN too.
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