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Moderated by: chrisbet, | Page: 1 2 3 ![]() ![]() |
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Film stock   -   Page   1 | |
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Posted: Sat Apr 13th, 2024 19:03 |
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1st Post |
chrisbet![]() ![]()
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Yes - I know, a bit odd on a DSLR forum but I have now acquired an FE to go alongside the FM - in the day I always used Kodak Gold 200 asa for colour and Ilford FP4 125 asa for black and white. Are these still the best general purpose stocks?
____________________ If it is broken it was probably me .... |
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Posted: Sat Apr 13th, 2024 20:38 |
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2nd Post |
Iain![]() ![]()
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I always used Fujifilm.
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Posted: Mon Apr 15th, 2024 08:13 |
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3rd Post |
Graham Whistler![]() ![]()
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Are you going to shoot some film with it. I still put the odd roll of FP4 in my Rolleiflex 3.5F, I got it new for £140 in 1959 it is still as good as new.![]() Click here to comment on this image.
____________________ Graham Whistler |
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Posted: Mon Apr 15th, 2024 10:34 |
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4th Post |
chrisbet![]() ![]()
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Yes - my plan is to load one with B&W and the other with colour and use them for street photography and portraits. They are less intrusive than the bigger DSLRs
____________________ If it is broken it was probably me .... |
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Posted: Mon Apr 15th, 2024 13:21 |
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5th Post |
jk![]() ![]()
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I believe the old film stocks of Kodak Tri-X and Pan-F as still made but for colour thr Fujifilm products are fine. For slides Kodachrome seems to have died but Fuji still make their range. That said I have my old F2 cameras and and F3 just for the love of handling them. I find film to be less useful for my photography and all prints will need to be made from digital images unless you want to invest in a full wet darkroom. Digital is environmentally and practically so much easier/better.
____________________ Still learning after all these years! https://nikondslr.uk/gallery_view.php?user=2&folderid=none |
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Posted: Wed Apr 17th, 2024 12:19 |
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6th Post |
chrisbet![]() ![]()
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Well, after reading a lot of reviews I find the whole situation confusing! So, as a starter for 10 I have gone for a roll of Ilford HP5+ (400 asa) and a roll of Kodak Gold (200 asa) I'll shoot them both through the FE which has been fully serviced and then maybe a roll of Fuji film colour & B&W and see which I prefer......
____________________ If it is broken it was probably me .... |
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Posted: Thu Apr 18th, 2024 19:22 |
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7th Post |
Eric![]() ![]()
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chrisbet wrote:Well, after reading a lot of reviews I find the whole situation confusing! So, as a starter for 10 I have gone for a roll of Ilford HP5+ (400 asa) and a roll of Kodak Gold (200 asa) I'll shoot them both through the FE which has been fully serviced and then maybe a roll of Fuji film colour & B&W and see which I prefer...... You may find the HP5 a bit grainier than 400 ISO on your DSLR. But I used it for action and got some nice results. You could also try XP2 ….which is a BW film using C41 colour chemistry…..I found that gave less grain than XP5. Fuji Velvia was the saturated 50asa beast but tended to be greenish. I used Provia 100asa in preference. Whatever happened to Konica ? That was a nice 100asa colour film with a slight blue shift.
____________________ Eric |
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Posted: Thu Apr 18th, 2024 20:23 |
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8th Post |
Iain![]() ![]()
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Eric wrote:You may find the HP5 a bit grainier than 400 ISO on your DSLR. But I used it for action and got some nice results. Konica was a nice film. It was Fuji print film I was using for the sport, 400 and 800asa and the 800 was pushed to 3200 when I did a night time game at the Newcastle Falcons rugby ground as they had 6 candles for flood light or so it seemed.
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Posted: Fri Apr 19th, 2024 15:22 |
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9th Post |
Eric![]() ![]()
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Iain wrote:Konica was a nice film. It was Fuji print film I was using for the sport, 400 and 800asa and the 800 was pushed to 3200 when I did a night time game at the Newcastle Falcons rugby ground as they had 6 candles for flood light or so it seemed. Spot the ball competitions were difficult in those days....you had so much grain the size of the football, you were spoilt where t put the X ![]()
____________________ Eric |
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Posted: Sat Apr 20th, 2024 10:13 |
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10th Post |
Iain![]() ![]()
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Eric wrote:Spot the ball competitions were difficult in those days....you had so much grain the size of the football, you were spoilt where t put the X That was the case at the rugby but it was either that or no pictures. ![]()
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