dcy
Subscriber
I normally shoot ISO 100 films because I live in a sunny part of the world and I like to shoot in beautiful sunny days. But this last weekend was the exception. I did a trip to the beautiful Carlsbad caverns, and even with an ISO 400 film my camera took several seconds to do each exposure, and tripods are not allowed in the cavern (tripping hazard). I did my best to stabilize the camera by pressing it against the hand rails, but I'm not expecting much. Thankfully, I had my digital camera with me and took some beautiful photos with it.
I want to go back to the caverns again, this time with a plan to shoot a film at 800 or even 1600 ISO. I have read in this forum that the ability to push film is one of the key things you gain when you switch from Kentmere 400 to its more expensive cousin HP5+. Separately, I've read that Tri-X and HP5+ perform similarly.
My Questions:
(1) Would you recommend that I bring HP5+ or Tri-X?
(2) Can I shoot these films at ISO 1600 or should I stay at 800?
(3) Is there anything else I should know about pushing film? My default plan is to use D-23 but I have PC-TEA and Rodinal at home too (I've read that Rodinal is bad for pushing).
There's Delta 3200, but that thing costs $18.50/roll !!!!
Thanks for the help!
I want to go back to the caverns again, this time with a plan to shoot a film at 800 or even 1600 ISO. I have read in this forum that the ability to push film is one of the key things you gain when you switch from Kentmere 400 to its more expensive cousin HP5+. Separately, I've read that Tri-X and HP5+ perform similarly.
My Questions:
(1) Would you recommend that I bring HP5+ or Tri-X?
(2) Can I shoot these films at ISO 1600 or should I stay at 800?
(3) Is there anything else I should know about pushing film? My default plan is to use D-23 but I have PC-TEA and Rodinal at home too (I've read that Rodinal is bad for pushing).
There's Delta 3200, but that thing costs $18.50/roll !!!!
Thanks for the help!