colyn
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I just ordered a couple of rolls from Freestyle.
Any comments, experience, etc??
Any comments, experience, etc??



titrisol said:Xcellent film, get a 720nm filter to get full effect
Since that filter is opaque RF cameras are ideal to shoot IR
I prefer DDX as developer, even though Amaloco AM74 produced very good negs that I have not yet scanned though
Roger Hicks said:Good stuff. I've been using it since before it came out (I have friends at Ilford...)With a deep red filter it's like more dramatic HP5 (and grainier) and with a visually opaque filter (T50 715nm or so) set your hand-held meter to EI 3 to EI 12: you can get some true IR effect (white foliage, very dark skies, etc.)
Cheers,
R.
rich815 said:Nice shots mr_phillip! I shot some of this years and years ago and was disappointed (bland and grainy!) but later found it was because I did not use the right filter. Now I've won a few rolls and the proper filter in a recent photo contest and am almost done with the first roll. Was thinking D-76 for development but I do have some DD-X too. Can those here talking about using DD-X with this film give me some times for development? I shot it at EI 12 with the deep red filter Ilford sells to use with this film. Thanks.
Dunno. The last Leitz IR filter I has, I sold over 20 years ago (it was E36). The filters I'm talking about are visually opaque at first but if you hold them to your eye for 20-30 seconds, excluding as much other light as possible with your circled thumb and forefinger, you start to see through them (on a sunny day). If you can see reasonably clearly though them immediately, they're probably not dark enough to give white foliage effects (though you should get black skies).colyn said:My film arrived today along with the DDX developer and I plan to give it a try this weekend.
Is the Leitz deep red Rm filter the same as those you list above??
Roger Hicks said:Dunno. The last Leitz IR filter I has, I sold over 20 years ago (it was E36). The filters I'm talking about are visually opaque at first but if you hold them to your eye for 20-30 seconds, excluding as much other light as possible with your circled thumb and forefinger, you start to see through them (on a sunny day). If you can see reasonably clearly though them immediately, they're probably not dark enough to give white foliage effects (though you should get black skies).
Cheers,
R.