Start At 400ISO, Pull/Push One Stop

wjlapier

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This is something I've never done, but thought it might work with the latitude of print film. I have XP2 and Fujifilm Superia 400 ISO I'm using for vacation pics. Can I pull/push a stop and still develop for 400 and have acceptable pictures? Same for 800 ISO film? I might bring a couple of rolls of Kodak 800 ISO if I can pull or push as needed. I'm also bringing a ND filter for daytime shooting on a sunny day.

Thanx--Bill
 
Dear Bill,

This is NOT pushing and pulling. It is simply over- and under-exposure.

A stop of under-exposure with most print films results in a significant loss of quality. If it didn't, they'd be faster films.

A stop of over-exposure, on the other hand, will reduce sharpness slightly; reduce 'grain' size with colour negative and chromogenic films (but increase it with conventional B+W); and often lead to what many see as better tonality and colours.

Cheers,

R.
 
This is something I've never done, but thought it might work with the latitude of print film. I have XP2 and Fujifilm Superia 400 ISO I'm using for vacation pics. Can I pull/push a stop and still develop for 400 and have acceptable pictures? Same for 800 ISO film? I might bring a couple of rolls of Kodak 800 ISO if I can pull or push as needed. I'm also bringing a ND filter for daytime shooting on a sunny day.

Thanx--Bill

Hey Bill,
For colour, check out the new Portra 400, you can under expose this by a few stops, and it still looks pretty nice:

http://www.twinlenslife.com/2010/12/in-bleak-midwinter-new-kodak-portra400.html

Cheers

Garry
 
Hey Bill,
For colour, check out the new Portra 400, you can under expose this by a few stops, and it still looks pretty nice:

http://www.twinlenslife.com/2010/12/in-bleak-midwinter-new-kodak-portra400.html

Cheers

Garry

Dear Garry,

This is very true. It has the widest latitude of any colour film I have ever tried, though 'a few stops' is further than I'd go. Depending on the camera and metering technique, I'd not go further than 2 stops, and 1 is better.

Cheers,

R.
 
Hi Roger,
I've shot it at 800 and can't tell the difference, 1600 it's just a touch dark, but entirely usable for the likes of me. I don't worry too much about shadow detail anyway. Maybe a "a few stops" is indeed pushing it a bit (no pun intended) but it's better than not getting the shot I expect.

Garry
 
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Dear Bill,

This is NOT pushing and pulling. It is simply over- and under-exposure.

A stop of under-exposure with most print films results in a significant loss of quality. If it didn't, they'd be faster films.

A stop of over-exposure, on the other hand, will reduce sharpness slightly; reduce 'grain' size with colour negative and chromogenic films (but increase it with conventional B+W); and often lead to what many see as better tonality and colours.

Cheers,

R.

Roger, thank you for your comment. I was wondering when people talk about print film's latitude, did it mean you could shoot over or under a stop of rated ISO. I think you know what I meant, but here is what I was thinking I could do. Shoot 400 ISO ( same roll ) at 200 when there is too much light, or 800 when I need more light. Develop at 400.

Garry, Too late to purchase Portra 400, in 135 anyway. I have plenty in 120, but none 135. Leaving this morning for Oregon coast for some R&R.

Thanx--
 
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