mischivo
Member
I made a pleasant personal discovery today. A few weeks ago, I had the misfortune of confusing Acros 100 for Neopan 400, and thus set my meter for ISO 320 (as that is what I expose Neopan at). I was petrified when I removed the film and saw the error I had made. Nevertheless, I gave in the film with instructions to have it pushed to 320. The guy at the lab didn't seem like he wanted to—he mentioned he'd have to research the processing times on the internet, and then he trailed off... I requested the film be pushed to 400. I had also given him a roll of Neopan 400 for regular processing.
I'm now done scanning these two rolls, and to my pleasant surprise, the results from Acros are much more appealing to my eye than any 400 ISO film processed without pushing. The tonality seems very natural to my eyes: the blacks are black and the lights are light (or white). The grain is also much less noticeable! Is this normal? I've never used Acros before, but if the grain is any finer when it isn't pushed, it might become my favourite monochrome film. It's definitely less grainy than Neopan when rated at the same speed.
I'm now done scanning these two rolls, and to my pleasant surprise, the results from Acros are much more appealing to my eye than any 400 ISO film processed without pushing. The tonality seems very natural to my eyes: the blacks are black and the lights are light (or white). The grain is also much less noticeable! Is this normal? I've never used Acros before, but if the grain is any finer when it isn't pushed, it might become my favourite monochrome film. It's definitely less grainy than Neopan when rated at the same speed.