NickTrop
Veteran
If grain is not your friend, then C41 B&W will be.
+1 Yep. That's the way to go - plus you have some speed and good latitude so you're not shooting 50 ISO to minimize grain.
If grain is not your friend, then C41 B&W will be.
Give minimal exposure -- more exposure with a conventional (non-chromogenic) film ALWAYS means more grain -- and use a fine-grain developer, though this can easily halve the true ISO of the film. HP5 is about 250 in Perceptol, 400 in ID-11, 650 in Microphen. And (surprise!) the higher the true speed, the bigger the grain...
R.
So, wouldn't you expect it to be slower than 400 in Microphen ??
Just to repeat, if you are scanning B+W film you will always exegerate the grain. Some scanners are worse than others. You have ommitted to say which scanner you are using.
Buy an enlarger. Or find someone who'll GIVE you one. I must have given away half a dozen over the years.
Cheers,
R.
I use a Nikon 9000ED.
Other than a wet darkroom print (or a digital camera image, of course), there is no way to avoid scanning. (I am referring to conventional B+W film.)
I am now closer than ever to buying an enlarger:bang: