I've never worked with such a slow film before, but I am excited about the possibilities of the ultra fine grain and resolution.
Any experience here with this film? Anything I should know before I start shooting?
Hi Peter,
yes, I am using this film and developer(s) for quite some time. Excellent stuff!
But you should consider this: It is
not a ISO 20 film! The real sensivity is much lower.
If you use it at ISO 20, you will get sufficient density in the midtones (Zone V), but shodows will be completely empty and black with no detail.
At this speed and normal development times this film-developer combination produces a very pronounced S-shape characteristic curve. No shadow detail, excellent mid-tone separation, less detail in the highlights because of the flattening curve.
But, the good news is the problems can be easily solved: Expose the film at its real speed: ISO 5-6.
Decrease the development time by about 15-20%.
Best is of course, as with all BW films and developers, to test and adjust real speed and development time to your workflow and needed contrast ('Eintesten', Kalibrieren').
Best method is using a densitometer. As you are living in Germany, you can use the German explanations from Manfred Anziger and Otto Beyer on their websites.
With the reduced development time and ISO 5-6 I've got very good tonality with excellent shadow detail, an almost ideal linear characteristic curve up to Zone VII, and from Zone VIII only a little bit flattening with sufficient highlight detail.
Resolution and sharpness with this film are outstanding. It is the film with the best detail rendition available (and all digital cams look like crap in comparison
😉). Grain free even at huge enlargements.
With this film in 35mm you get a quality often better than 6x9cm standard medium format film.
Of course, if you want best tonality with this film it is ISO 5-6. A tripod is a must have.
If you need higher speed, then Agfa Copex Rapid, developed in Spur Modular UR New is the way to go (Adox CMS 20 is Agfa HDP microfilm; the Adotech developer is made by Spur).
Agfa Copex Rapid with Spur Modular UR New is one of the best BW film / developer combinations on the market. Speed is ISO 32-40.
I can highly recommend it.
Compared to famous Agfa APX 25, Rollei Pan 25, Efke 25, Ilford Pan F+ and pulled at ISO 50 TMX, Delta 100, Acros you get
- much higher resolution
- better sharpness
- little bit finer grain
- partly higher speed (compared to the ISO 25 films)
- partly better tonality
In 35mm you achieve medium format quality with this film / developer combination.
I've compared it to Plus-X, APX 100, Fp4+, Fomapan 100 and Rollei RPX 100 in 6x6 and have got better image quality with 35mm Copex Rapid / Spur compared to these standard films in 6x6.
As you have to stop down about 1,5 stops more in medium format to get the same depth of field in 120 compared to 35mm, the speed of ISO 40 in 35mm is comparable to ISO 100 - 125 in medium format.
And with this film / developer in 35mm your costs per shot are about 40% lower compared to standard medium format film.
In 120 you get close to 9x12cm LF film quality.
Another advantage of this film: I can be also developed in the Scala reversal process as a high resolution BW slide.
ISO 64 in 35mm and ISO 80 in 120 in the Scala process.
Development at
www.photostudio13.de .
Cheers, Jan