paulfish4570
Veteran
harman bought kentmere in 2007.
from a 2009 press release:
"After acquiring KENTMERE in 2007, it was always HARMAN’s intention to use its greater size and infrastructure to benefit this new addition to its business. As such, it has already used its expertise and advanced manufacturing technology to increase batch-to-batch consistency of the KENTMERE PHOTOGRAPHIC range. This latest development will help to boost market penetration."
the kentmere films are their own, it seems ...
from a 2009 press release:
"After acquiring KENTMERE in 2007, it was always HARMAN’s intention to use its greater size and infrastructure to benefit this new addition to its business. As such, it has already used its expertise and advanced manufacturing technology to increase batch-to-batch consistency of the KENTMERE PHOTOGRAPHIC range. This latest development will help to boost market penetration."
the kentmere films are their own, it seems ...
jatiphoto
Established
yep rain. i havent done it yet, but this film would be great to shoot/dev in rodinal, to purposely have alot of grain.
KoNickon
Nick Merritt
Did Kentmere make film prior to Harman's acquisition of it? Or did it only make paper? I ask because I had never heard of Kentmere film until I got a couple of rolls, and saw the Mobberly address on the box. My working theory is that Kentmere film is how they're branding some old school Ilford emulsions, but I may be way off on this.
paulfish4570
Veteran
kentmere was making its own film and paper.
Fotohuis
Well-known
Papers, yes they produced.
Film: new since Ilford/Harman merged them.
Under the Kentmere label they are selling a cheaper line films.
Film: new since Ilford/Harman merged them.
Under the Kentmere label they are selling a cheaper line films.
wojtek
Established
I didn't like it. Souped in HC110 it was rather dull and very flat. I won't use it again.
Roger Hicks
Veteran
Hi Roger,
Could you elaborate on how a reduced of amount of silver causes a film to be more demanding? One of my biggest faults has been lack of consistency in the darkroom. Mainly because I wanted to change all and every parameter, without ever arriving at a film/developer/development regime that worked for me and I could repeat consistently.
Cheers,
Ronald
Dear Ronald,
Very briefly, given that I am not an emulsion chemist and that this is based on limited understanding:
On a conventional cubic-crystal film, there is a wide range of crystal sizes, which translates directly into more latitude. Up to a certain point, more silver is better, simply for tonality and latitude. Beyond that point, of course, there's no advantage in more silver.
Films with a bigger range of crystal sizes and more silver are also more forgiving when it comes to development.
If you hit on EXACTLY the right exposure and development regime, the Kentmere films can deliver excellent results, but their silver-richer cousins will give you better results, easier.
Cheers,
R.
River Dog
Always looking
Thanks for the information, I will stick with Acros 100 in Rodinal.
Taija71A
Member
Re: Kentmere Films... ARRRGH!!! ^$*#~&#-!@* 
_____
Like my Mother always told me... "If you can't say something good about something... Then don't say anything at all."
I can't help but feel, that this is *** Definitely *** the case with respect to the Kentmere films.
__________
_____
Like my Mother always told me... "If you can't say something good about something... Then don't say anything at all."
I can't help but feel, that this is *** Definitely *** the case with respect to the Kentmere films.
__________
kossi008
Photon Counter
I happen to quite like the K400 / RPX400, and it's definitely NOT grainier than HP5+. Here are some examples:
Rated at 400 in Xtol1+1:
Rated at 200 in Spur SD2525:
Recently I have rated it at 800 and developed in Emofin with very nice results (no uploads yet, unfortunately)...
I've also briefly tested the K100 and will probably adopt that as my substitute for APX100 when that runs out...
Rated at 400 in Xtol1+1:

Rated at 200 in Spur SD2525:

Recently I have rated it at 800 and developed in Emofin with very nice results (no uploads yet, unfortunately)...
I've also briefly tested the K100 and will probably adopt that as my substitute for APX100 when that runs out...
Fotohuis
Well-known
Both with very nice results. Good job!
RicD
Newbie
Oh-my, I am a few years late to this party.
My opinion of Kentmere 100 and 400 is based solely on images presented in this thread; I have not used any Kentmere film. To my eye these images appear the same as Kodak Tri-X we used in the 60s.
Tri-X today is different than back then. There have been numerous (do not know how many) changes to Tri-X emulsion bringing it to the Tri-X we now use. Back in the 60s Kodak said shoot Tri-X 200 at double its rated speed. Thus 200 would be 400, however development time did not change. For those old enough to remember that it would be interesting to hear your opinion as well.
Kentmere may be attempting to produce that much older Tri-X look and feel thus the grain we now see in their film; only a guess. For my B&W shooting my first choice is Ilford FP4 Plus, second choice Delta 100.
My opinion of Kentmere 100 and 400 is based solely on images presented in this thread; I have not used any Kentmere film. To my eye these images appear the same as Kodak Tri-X we used in the 60s.
Tri-X today is different than back then. There have been numerous (do not know how many) changes to Tri-X emulsion bringing it to the Tri-X we now use. Back in the 60s Kodak said shoot Tri-X 200 at double its rated speed. Thus 200 would be 400, however development time did not change. For those old enough to remember that it would be interesting to hear your opinion as well.
Kentmere may be attempting to produce that much older Tri-X look and feel thus the grain we now see in their film; only a guess. For my B&W shooting my first choice is Ilford FP4 Plus, second choice Delta 100.
mpaniagua
Newby photographer
I would say Kentmere 400 grains could be more "Harsh" than Tri-x. Great film though.
Jake Mongey
Well-known
Isn't it made by Ilford? I suspect it can't be bad. I have a couple of rolls on order from Discount Films Direct. Not yet had the chance to use though![]()
Its now made by ilford however, its not an ilford design. I shot it in bulk for a while and enjoyed it, IMO straight at box with standard developer its not anything to write home about but once you try different techniques with developers such as Rodinol it really comes to life.
One of my favourite ways to shoot it is pushed to 800 and stood in rodinol for 1.5 hours 1+100 which gives it a lovely look and good contrast
mpaniagua
Newby photographer
Its now made by ilford however, its not an ilford design. I shot it in bulk for a while and enjoyed it, IMO straight at box with standard developer its not anything to write home about but once you try different techniques with developers such as Rodinol it really comes to life.
One of my favourite ways to shoot it is pushed to 800 and stood in rodinol for 1.5 hours 1+100 which gives it a lovely look and good contrast
Thanks for the info Jake. Will try it. Usually stick with D-76 and yeah, regular results, nothing that great. I usually use it when I just shoot for fun or on my photo-walks around the office or my home. Cheap
Jon Buffington
Member
The 100 is really a nice, classic emulsion film. Developers I use are hc-110, rodinal and d-76. Examples:
hc-110 dil h (pakon f135+ scan)
rodinal 1:50
kentmere 400 is also really nice as well (though 100 is a bit nicer). Both tend to bloom in the highlights in strong backlight situations, probably a thin anti halation layer. Some may like that look for certain situations
d-76
hc-110 dil h
I have and do shoot a bunch of this film, all bought in bulk. Fantastic price point for a nice general purpose film. Sure, I like shooting other stuff like tmax, delta, fp4+, hp5+, triX, double X etc, but, I can't complain when I use kentmere. The 400 sometimes leaves me wanting a spec more from it (the 100 is very nice) but really, I could just change developers or make do.
hc-110 dil h (pakon f135+ scan)


rodinal 1:50

kentmere 400 is also really nice as well (though 100 is a bit nicer). Both tend to bloom in the highlights in strong backlight situations, probably a thin anti halation layer. Some may like that look for certain situations
d-76

hc-110 dil h

I have and do shoot a bunch of this film, all bought in bulk. Fantastic price point for a nice general purpose film. Sure, I like shooting other stuff like tmax, delta, fp4+, hp5+, triX, double X etc, but, I can't complain when I use kentmere. The 400 sometimes leaves me wanting a spec more from it (the 100 is very nice) but really, I could just change developers or make do.
johnf04
Well-known
Ko.Fe.
Lenses 35/21 Gears 46/20
Oh-my, I am a few years late to this party.
My opinion of Kentmere 100 and 400 is based solely on images presented in this thread; I have not used any Kentmere film. To my eye these images appear the same as Kodak Tri-X we used in the 60s.
Tri-X today is different than back then...
Sweet!
But how do you know? Negatives scans wasn't option in the 60s.
And I believe what bw negative film is to be judge by the prints.
Those are scans of the prints, from Kentmere 400:

From Kentmere 100:

Greyscale
Veteran
Kentmere 100 in D76 was the first film that I ever developed at home, I suppose that it will always have a spot in my heart because of that.
From that first roll
From that first roll



Daryl J.
Well-known
Elsewhere on this forum, it was mentioned Kentmere 400 was recently reformulated.
True?
If yes, when? And what changed?
Thanks!
True?
If yes, when? And what changed?
Thanks!
Share:
-
This site uses cookies to help personalise content, tailor your experience and to keep you logged in if you register.
By continuing to use this site, you are consenting to our use of cookies.