amateriat
We're all light!
I went into Adorama yesterday (Thursday...Friday is sheer, utter madness...if you've done it, you know exactly what I mean) to stock up on film. Here's what roughly $166 (including NYC tax) buys:
- 20 rolls Kodak BW400CN (two 10-roll bricks)
- 10 Rolls Kodak Portra 400NC (two 5-roll Pro Packs)
- 2 rolls Kodak Portra 160NC
(Most of this is for specific projects...the rest is for stashing away.)
I hadn't bothered to compare different color films just yet (I'm shooting a daylight gig over the weekend...Fuji, like Batman, more or less rules the night, but Rochester holds the daylight fort for me), but the chromogenic state-of-cost got to me. Up until relatively recently, I'd bit the bullet and chose Ilford XP2 over BW400CN for two reasons: (1) unlike BW400, XP2 comes sans orange-ish cast, making it more amenable to the wet darkroom should I ever choose that option, and (2) a vague notion that it scanned just a bit better. I've been challenged on this by several people (even by Frank van Riper, and how can I argue with him?). I was going to mention pushability, but even though Kodak's offering doesn't appear to push well at all (the photo agency I used to work for pushed its predecessor, T400CN, but I forget how well that went, even though I was in charge of the push processing at the time), I can't say XP2 is more than marginally better at, say, EI 800. (Edit: While I was still in charge of that Noritsu processor at the agency, I also push-processed XP2–the real way, by adjusting development time, which just meant slowing down the processor transport–for myself: that stuff looked pretty sweet.)
But what I couldn't totally ignore was price. XP2 clocks in at $5.39 a roll at Adorama; BW400CN comes in at $4.29. Multiply that by the 20 rolls I bought yesterday evening and you get the picture fast.
Yeah, in my case, Kodak has home-field advantage: the stuff is made a mere 450 or so miles away, in the same state, while XP2 is brought to me from across the sea (cue Charles Trenet singing La Mer...or is that cool to mention here in regard to a Brit film?). But $22 was $22 this afternoon, and Rochester knows this.
So, for now, I stick with Kodak's chromo (it's quite good stuff, BTW...I don't feel I'm compromising in terms of overall quality or scannability). But, in the shifting sands of the film world we know and try to love, getting what you want–or think you want–gets trickier all the time.
- Barrett

- 20 rolls Kodak BW400CN (two 10-roll bricks)
- 10 Rolls Kodak Portra 400NC (two 5-roll Pro Packs)
- 2 rolls Kodak Portra 160NC
(Most of this is for specific projects...the rest is for stashing away.)
I hadn't bothered to compare different color films just yet (I'm shooting a daylight gig over the weekend...Fuji, like Batman, more or less rules the night, but Rochester holds the daylight fort for me), but the chromogenic state-of-cost got to me. Up until relatively recently, I'd bit the bullet and chose Ilford XP2 over BW400CN for two reasons: (1) unlike BW400, XP2 comes sans orange-ish cast, making it more amenable to the wet darkroom should I ever choose that option, and (2) a vague notion that it scanned just a bit better. I've been challenged on this by several people (even by Frank van Riper, and how can I argue with him?). I was going to mention pushability, but even though Kodak's offering doesn't appear to push well at all (the photo agency I used to work for pushed its predecessor, T400CN, but I forget how well that went, even though I was in charge of the push processing at the time), I can't say XP2 is more than marginally better at, say, EI 800. (Edit: While I was still in charge of that Noritsu processor at the agency, I also push-processed XP2–the real way, by adjusting development time, which just meant slowing down the processor transport–for myself: that stuff looked pretty sweet.)
But what I couldn't totally ignore was price. XP2 clocks in at $5.39 a roll at Adorama; BW400CN comes in at $4.29. Multiply that by the 20 rolls I bought yesterday evening and you get the picture fast.
Yeah, in my case, Kodak has home-field advantage: the stuff is made a mere 450 or so miles away, in the same state, while XP2 is brought to me from across the sea (cue Charles Trenet singing La Mer...or is that cool to mention here in regard to a Brit film?). But $22 was $22 this afternoon, and Rochester knows this.
So, for now, I stick with Kodak's chromo (it's quite good stuff, BTW...I don't feel I'm compromising in terms of overall quality or scannability). But, in the shifting sands of the film world we know and try to love, getting what you want–or think you want–gets trickier all the time.
- Barrett
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