What's your 4x5 choice of B&W film?

Signs & fragments

A
Signs & fragments

  • 4
  • 0
  • 41
Summer corn, summer storm

D
Summer corn, summer storm

  • 1
  • 2
  • 45
Horizon, summer rain

D
Horizon, summer rain

  • 0
  • 0
  • 47
$12.66

A
$12.66

  • 7
  • 5
  • 197

Recent Classifieds

Forum statistics

Threads
198,819
Messages
2,781,292
Members
99,714
Latest member
MCleveland
Recent bookmarks
0

nworth

Member
Joined
Aug 27, 2005
Messages
2,228
Location
Los Alamos,
Format
Multi Format
I do little enough 4X5 so that there has been quite a variety. My regular go-to is FP4. This is a high quality 125 speed film that has been reliable and easy to use almost everywhere. HP-5 is an excellent 400 speed film that I have used. I have also used TMax-400 with very good results. The off brands you see are often inferior and may not be as uniform as Kodak and Ilford.
 

Europan

Member
Joined
May 21, 2009
Messages
634
Location
Äsch, Switzerland
Format
Multi Format
Gigabitfilm 25 was my favourite, just mindblowing what’s possible with it. I made a contact positive of this picture and projected it. You could read the title text on the film the cutter is holding in her hands.

Frau Kopp am Montageplatz.jpg
 

Adrian Bacon

Subscriber
Joined
Oct 18, 2016
Messages
2,086
Location
Petaluma, CA.
Format
Multi Format
For 4x5, Kodak 400TMY2 is my standard, though I have 10 sheets of 100TMX in the freezer that I'll get to at some point for something special if I feel that I want that kind of resolution. For 120, It's either Kodak 400TX or 100TMX, mainly because with my process I develop them both exactly the same way and can shoot either one depending on how much light I have and just throw it all in the tank and go. For 35mm, mostly 400TMY2, though again, I have a few rolls of 100TMX in the freezer that I'll get to at some point. 35mm is my little "point and shoot" (Fujifilm Klasse) that I either always have in my pocket, or in my bag, so I can just grab it and catch snaps of the kids and stuff. I'd shoot 400TX, but for 35mm, it's a bit too grainy for my tastes, so it's TMY2. A lot less grain, and good resolution for 35mm. 120 is a couple of different cameras, my preferred is the Fuji GW690 for shooting 6x9. Big honking negative in roll film form. The lens on the camera is ridiculously sharp, and on a negative that size, 400TX grain is about the same as 400TMY2 grain in 35mm form, which I'm fine with. With 100TMX, man, 120 6x9 is *a lot* of resolution. I've yet to have a situation where I had visible grain on those negatives. It's awesome. For 4x5, I have two systems. One is a Toyo field camera, the other a studio monorail that is more custom parts than anything else. Again, 400TMY2 is my standard just because I can very easily use it out in the field, and for studio work, it lets me stop down a couple of stops to get a little more DOF if I need it, and 400TMY2 is fine grained enough that in 4x5, grain is pretty much a non-issue.

I'm a hybrid, so nowadays for simplicity and productivity, I've pretty much standardized on D-76 1:1 at 68 degrees. 400TMY2 is 10:00, and 100TMX and 400TX are 9:30. I do one gentle inversion every 15 seconds with a tap on the counter for everything (including fixer). From there, it's a standardized raw scan that is then fed into a lut tool that inverts the image and converts it to 32 bit floating point linear light space in a tiff file (with a linear icc profile attached). The lut (look up table) tool acts as a film profile that contains density readings of the film in full stop increments from film fog to max density. As long as I develop and scan exactly the same way every time, I get a nice floating point tiff file that can have upwards of 15+ stops of light in it (depending on scene shot and film used) that I just pull into Adobe Lightroom and treat just like I would any other raw image from any other source. It's great and super consistent and lets me use all the other same post processing tools that I use for digital shooting, and most importantly, it lets me be pretty productive, but still shoot film which gives me a physical archive of what I've shot, which is what I want.

I've been considering moving all the development to 9:30 so it's all exactly the same, but that would mean I'd probably dump a good stop of light right into the film base for 400TMY2 (not decided yet if I want to do that), and I'd have to re-profile the film make a new 400TMY2 lut, but if I go that route, I can shoot as I please and just throw it all in the same big tank (for roll film at least).
 

RalphLambrecht

Subscriber
Joined
Sep 19, 2003
Messages
14,649
Location
K,Germany
Format
Medium Format
I always shoot 120 Trix400, Ilford Pan F and sometimes Fomapan 100. I was surprised that there isn't Trix-400 or Ilford Pan F in 4x5 sheets. Why is that? And what's your substitute for those?

Thanks
I either use Tmax100 or FP4+
 

Europan

Member
Joined
May 21, 2009
Messages
634
Location
Äsch, Switzerland
Format
Multi Format
Thanks. Anniversary Graflex with Meyer Euryplan 127 mm, f/6.3, open, half a second, one light source.

Unfortunately it’s become unavailable. The Gigabit film project lies in coma, not dead still but engaged black-and-white photography, I mean picture making by people who aim at more than the average, is comatose itself. Photography is a time thing and the world of today has no time, a minute is too long. I would have exposed for much longer then but obviously it wasn’t feasible. I took another picture with an other model, staged to have happened in 1962. That one is under and not perfectly focused. Always feel sad when I think back of the time between the Limba covered walls of my long-gone lab.
 
Last edited:

msage

Member
Joined
Mar 22, 2003
Messages
436
Location
Washington State
Format
Large Format
I have been using TXP 320 for a while. I love the film. Use it for 80% of my 4x5 shooting. Use TMY 400 for low light (because of the better reciprocity factor) and some infrared.
But I do love TXP 320!
 
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:



Ilford ADOX Freestyle Photographic Stearman Press Weldon Color Lab Blue Moon Camera & Machine
Top Bottom