S
StuartR
Guest
The Delta films, Efke 25 and Fuji Acros are all fairly high contrast black and white films. But as others have said, contrast comes primarily at the printing or post-processing stage. In the darkroom, don't be afraid to print at grade 3 or 4, and in photoshop, don't be afraid to shave off a good amount of your histogram. It is about making a photo that illustrates the scene as you want it to be shown, not so that every speck of shadow and highlight detail is visible.
Anyway, here are two examples -- same neg, same film, same frame. The difference is that one was flat out of the scanner, and the other was edited to be a contrastier photo.
If you have a choice, it is better to start with a less contrasty neg, as you can always increase contrast, but you cannot really go the other way. Slides of course are an exception.
Anyway, here are two examples -- same neg, same film, same frame. The difference is that one was flat out of the scanner, and the other was edited to be a contrastier photo.
If you have a choice, it is better to start with a less contrasty neg, as you can always increase contrast, but you cannot really go the other way. Slides of course are an exception.