f/stopblues said:
I think I need to read up on C-41, cause I can't get my brain around this... How can it be a push or pull without a change in developement? What's the variable? If you just plain ol' underexpose by two stops, would it come out correctly? 😕
Right, pushing and pulling are + and - adjustments to processing. I have had C41 films including XP push-processed one stop, and sometimes it saves the day but at the expense of higher contrast (as expected) and highlights block up readily. Usually, films for C41 process are very resistant to highlight blocking, very tolerant of overexposure. But the processing seems touchier in that regard.
Ilford's chromogenic black & white film now known as XP2 Super started off back around 1980 as XP1 400, and used a variation of the C41 chemistry and processing procedure. It worked ok at the commercial labs but tended to be quite flat, low contrast, and I think they expected folks to use their Ilford XP1 chemistry kits (in various sizes) for best processing results. I still have an unused 84 oz kit in my darkroom... The XP1 kit processing gave better densities than commercial processing. I think it was with XP2 that Ilford changed the film to be 100% compatible with standard lab C41 processing and discontinued the home kits.
Ok, so what's this about shooting it from EI 50 to EI 1600 without processing adjustment... Process C41 color films have 3 senstive layers (4 for some Fuji), each dedicated to a different color. The chromogenic B&W films have three sensitive layers too, but all panchromatic rather than color. And they say these three layers each have different sensitivities to light; three "speeds" if you will, in one film. This is supposed to broaden the usability of the film, and as I recall Ilford was reluctant to assign an offical ISO/ASA rating as the film just didn't react like other B&W films in the ISO testing.
I think this is the basis for the claims of a wide range of usable film speed settings. Might be ideal for a box camera, huh. And gives you lots of leeway for exposure errors and unusual situations. So I don't disagree that XP has a wider range of usable exposure than C41 color films. Yet like all Process C41 films, the chromogenics seem to have less tolerance for underexposure than for overexposure. Note that we're talking standard processing here, no "pushing" or "pulling" by the lab.
Less exposure tends to give a grittier grainier look with less shadow detail. More exposure makes the dye clouds closer together for a smoother creamier look, fine shadow detail and contrast, and bright highlights that may look blocked in a machine print but which do indeed have detail in the neg that may call for some burning-in to see in the print. Machine prints on color paper often look dull, as the film tends toward low contrast in order to record that wide range of light and dark. And if the lab tech isn't careful, the color paper may carry an over-all tint that might or might not be pleasant. Usually you need to use a harder grade of B&W enlarging paper to give some sparkle to the print. Easy to adjust this in the scan too, for digital output.
Give it a try yourself, perhaps a test where you shoot 5 different film speed settings (say, 50, 200, 400, 800, 1600), for each picture on the same roll, hopefully with the shots on this roll covering the whole range of lighting conditions you expect to encounter, and see which level of exposure has best results.... and this might vary according to the circumstances. So you might conclude that setting EI 100 is best for a sunny beach, and EI 800 for the night club, or vice versa. But you'll have a better feel for how the film reacts, and some basis for personal preferences. For my photo circumstances, I set the meter to 250.