Bertram2
Gone elsewhere
pukupi said:Our home in Japan is far too small to set up a darkroom without risking the ire of my better half but I want to work more with black and white film. My local lab usually takes one week to process black and white film so I'm thinking about using Kodak BW 400CN instead and would appreciate your opinions of this film.
Almost my complete B&W porfolio posted at RFF is made by C41, from similar reasons, first of all because may lab used to make a CD with decent scans only for C41
I started with T400CN, changed to XP2 and went back to BW400CN which I like better than XP2.
If you do not like the orange mask which gives the prints a sepia toning you can let develop the film first and then let it print on B&W paper.
My XP2 often came back with a greenish tone which was worse than the sepia tone of Kodak. Sometimes I leave it uncorrected because it fits well to am style of shooting.
T400CN needed push 1 for 800 and push2 for 1600, don't know what BW400CN needs, I nver pushed it. Careful with underexposeing, causes ugly results. And be careful in bright sunlight, highlights tend to burn out. For reflecting surfaces as leafs of roofs I torture myself with a polfilter because of that.
Works well also at 200., scans easier with cheap scanners than silver based film does. Almost grain free at 400, best at covered skies. It then achieves a soft an creamy tonality which is unique.