parasko
Established
Provia 100 and 400x...both scan beautifully!
Plus X [snip] BTW Tri X in D76 1+1 is the standard combination of Michael Kenna, see if you like his photos.
Strange to see so little mention of Velvia. For landscape IMO that's a must have if you're into the very vibrant colour sort of thing.
Plus-X in 120 is, sadly, discontinued.
A lot rides on what medium format you're shooting. I also really like Tri-X in 120, and it gets better the larger the format - but in 645 I'd tend to err towards something finer grained, but in 67, 68 and 69, Tri-X is just beautiful.
Marty
Roger,
Certainly. But I find that using Adox results in lower contrast images given the same time, developer and agitation regime.
Could it be caused by a different distribution/concentration of silver versus other brands?
Plus-X in 120 is, sadly, discontinued.
A lot rides on what medium format you're shooting. I also really like Tri-X in 120, and it gets better the larger the format - but in 645 I'd tend to err towards something finer grained, but in 67, 68 and 69, Tri-X is just beautiful.
Marty
Very sadly, re Plus-X. I just did a film trade with a guy in Mexico to get some (unexpired) Plus-X in 120. The most expensive film I have in the fridge 🙂.
I've been loving Tri-X @ 200 on sunny days, in Rodinal 1+50 for 10 minutes, 10s agitation every 2 minutes (at 70-72F).
arkansas river near co highway 24 by mike thomas, on Flickr
cherry knolls park by mike thomas, on Flickr
You can't compare films unless they are developed to about the same contrast. If one film is consistently less contrasty you might try developing for a longer time to get contrast comparable to the other films you're comparing.