Clint Troy
Well-known
Ilford's 3-for-9.99$ seemed like a fire-sale to me. I personally understood that they had to clear the stocks before they'd go out of (stamped) date, which would have been catastrophic for them.
Seriously?
The reason is quite obvious and it's one of the main subject of this thread.
That's wrong. Only the 24exp rolls production has been stopped. Normal 36exp. rolls production is continued.
Cheers, Jan
Fotokemika and Foma regularly yes, but the Arista version of Tri-X had numerous coating problems a year and a bit ago. My college program uses the Arista Premium and we all saw it across the board, even on films from those students who have impeccable processing methods. Perhaps a fluke, and as stated elsewhere anyone can have something slip through no matter how good their QC.
I don't think anyone can argue that the range of films from Fuji and Kodak have been halved over the last few years. Not saying Freestyle has anything to do with that, just noting the coincidence. Perhaps Freestyle is a clearing house more than we think (I'm a regular Freestyle customer don't get me wrong here). I'm concerned this means that Ilford is finding it hard to move through their stock, they and ADOX have been seeming like our last great hopes.
Have never had this with Tri-X.
Maybe Kodak sold a batch which had not passed the strong Kodak QC to Freestyle.
As for Adox:
Don't expect too much from them: Their owner had often explained in his own German forum that they can only be a kind of replacement for Fotokemika, nothing more.
Even if all will go perfectly there then they could be there in about 5 years. That would be the best case, with lot's of luck.
He has always said that Adox will never be a company that could replace Ilford, Kodak or Fuji.
Cheers, Jan
It seems that there isn't a market for any Fuji or Kodak scale analog company anymore.
BTW, in addition to shooting film on a regular basis, spreading the word and getting other photographers interested in using film is something we can and should do, too.
The perfect photography world would be where we could use both film and digital. But to have the option to choose film it has to be there. And it only will be there if photographers (= we) demand it.
Try as I might tho color film has lost to digital for most everyone I show it to, myself included.
TRI-X... Too expensive stuff and too many middlemen with that "Great yellow father stuff"
The way I see the subject: maco/Rollei had their own specs for 400 Iso and 100iso traditional film with acetate base. They were fed up with Efke & Foma, so they turned to Kentmere. Kentmere produced for Maco several HUGE master rolls of each emulsion.
...
For film it's only black & white now.
Dunno about Bill, but for colour, digital is basically like going straight to a scan -- which is where my colour always went for publication -- and digital colour printing is vastly easier than wet colour. Yes, I like Cibachromes, but they're hard work and expensive, and I've always leaned towards the view that content and composition are what make a good picture. A REALLY good picture can survive almost anything, and (as with cameras) print quality takes us back to the 'quality plateau': where any further increase in technical quality is irrelevant as compared with an increase in the skill of the photographer.Cared to explain why?
I am asking because I'd like to know more (ie. I am not trying to be sarcastic).
Dunno about Bill, but for colour, digital is basically like going straight to a scan -- which is where my colour always went for publication -- and digital colour printing is vastly easier than wet colour. Yes, I like Cibachromes, but they're hard work and expensive, and I've always leaned towards the view that content and composition are what make a good picture. A REALLY good picture can survive almost anything, and (as with cameras) print quality takes us back to the 'quality plateau': where any further increase in technical quality is irrelevant as compared with an increase in the skill of the photographer.
Even my wife, a film diehard and darkroom addict, says she can imagine no circumstances in which she would go back to wet printing for colour.
Cheers,
R.
Every day. I teach film only / darkroom only photo classes and have hooked many on B&W film. I shoot B&W film nearly every day, most often several rolls a day.
Try as I might tho color film has lost to digital for most everyone I show it to, myself included.
I was the last person I know personally who was C-printing.
A lot of your reasoning of not shooting colour film is because of its challenges in printing.
Other than your belief of composition/content being sufficient for a good picture, is there any intrinsic reason of why colour film is inferior to digital?
What if one doesn't do any wet prints for either BW and colour anyway?
Or is there a quantitative measure on why BW film is superior say over digital BW?
It is reassuring to hear that there is nothing intrinsic about colour film being inferior (as it could have been hinted by Bill's post).Well, I am not Roger, but perhaps I can help you.
Color printing from color negative in the wet darkroom is not as difficult as some people claim. You need some practice in filtering, that is the main factor. In all other respects it is even a lot easier than color printing with inkjet and BW film printing.
For filtering some very helpful tools are available.
You have just to do a little training.Then when you have learned it, it is easy.
Traditional printing with a color enlarger is also unsurpassed concerning resolution, if you use an APO enlarging lens. We've tested that several times, lot's of other experts in Europe have tested that, too.
We all got the same results:
Traditional enlarging with APO enlarging lenses (both in color and in BW printing) is surpassing the best drum scanners significantly concerning detail resolution!
The hybrid workflow creates a significant loss in detail. It's on the film, but not resolved by the drum scanner.
Classic optical printing is better in this respect.
No.
See my posting above. Critical colors like skin tones are more precisely recorded by film.
Higher dynamic range is another advantage.
And you can get excellent results without intensive post-processing.
Slide projection is inconvenient (imagine wanting to look at the picture every time you dine), and it is expensive compared to 8cent euro a roll of colour film with 2-3euro of processing. I wouldn't consider mounting my slides anymore. Plus, it is now nearly impossible to get medium format slides mounted.Slide projection: Unsurpassed in image quality for big enlargements. Highest resolution and best color and tone reproduction, both in color and BW.
And that at extremely low costs. A 1,5m x 1m picture cost you less than a buck in slide projection.
More than 100 bucks as a print.
I agree that film offers more natural look to most of us, however that could be because we grew up with film and have gotten accustomed to pictures coming from film throughout our aging process. For the new generation, their opinion may differ.Most people just like the look of film BW more than the look of digital BW.
And lots of photographers also like the (to my mind: more natural) look of color film more than the look of digital color.
Slide projection is inconvenient (imagine wanting to look at the picture every time you dine),
and it is expensive compared to 8cent euro a roll of colour film with 2-3euro of processing.
I wouldn't consider mounting my slides anymore.
Plus, it is now nearly impossible to get medium format slides mounted.
Highlight: absolutely none. But nor, I believe, is it inferior.Thanks for the response Roger.
A lot of your reasoning of not shooting colour film is because of its challenges in printing. Other than your belief of composition/content being sufficient for a good picture, is there any intrinsic reason of why colour film is inferior to digital? What if one doesn't do any wet prints for either BW and colour anyway?
Or is there a quantitative measure on why BW film is superior say over digital BW?
One big distinction between BW and colour film to me is that you can often get colour film for cheap in a drugstore (0.8c euro per roll in Rossmann), and BW always appears professional and exotic hence costs considerably more. For the cost of a BW roll, one could get buy a colour roll and have it developed, so economically it appears a good deal.