Noll
Well-known
Hi all, I just developed 2 rolls of film together - One was a slightly expired but refrigerated roll of Foma 100, and the other was a just-exposed still-fresh roll of Arista Edu 100. Obviously, same developer (caffenol cm), time, temp and agitation for both. Only difference was the Foma was exposed in an Olympus 35RC, and the Arista Edu in an OM1. Both rolls were shot with yellow filters.
Differences noticed: The Arista had a slightly clearer base, no blackened film edges, cleaner edge markings and just a very consistent (more dense?) emulsion. Maybe even finer grain? Also, most of my Arista negatives were slightly unerexposed while most of the 35RC Foma shots were a tad overexposed.
So while the differences could attributed to the different cameras being used (fwiw, both were powered by the same kind of zinc-air battery) - the shutter speeds or meters could be slightly off. At the very least the edge exposure and markings speak for themselves.
Could an alternative explanation be that Foma upped their game for the Arista Edu production run and/or improved their Foma formula? Or maybe we're talking about a slightly different emulsion altogether?
Either way I am impressed with this "cheapie" film! I'll post some examples in a few minutes. Any thoughts?
Differences noticed: The Arista had a slightly clearer base, no blackened film edges, cleaner edge markings and just a very consistent (more dense?) emulsion. Maybe even finer grain? Also, most of my Arista negatives were slightly unerexposed while most of the 35RC Foma shots were a tad overexposed.
So while the differences could attributed to the different cameras being used (fwiw, both were powered by the same kind of zinc-air battery) - the shutter speeds or meters could be slightly off. At the very least the edge exposure and markings speak for themselves.
Could an alternative explanation be that Foma upped their game for the Arista Edu production run and/or improved their Foma formula? Or maybe we're talking about a slightly different emulsion altogether?
Either way I am impressed with this "cheapie" film! I'll post some examples in a few minutes. Any thoughts?