Vince Lupo
Whatever
I voted 'other' -- Monochrom!
But seriously, I like Tri-X.
But seriously, I like Tri-X.
Snowbuzz
Well-known
Tri-X and then Pan F.
MartinP
Veteran
Where did you hear this?
That Foma make the EDU films? It is hardly a secret. Visitors on the tour of the Foma plant at Hradek-Kralove have seen the rolls being made and packed. I have also seen fotos of that, here or at APUG.
Ilford are on record as saying that they do not repackage their own branded films - however they will make anything else anyone wants (for example, they produce 120 size rolls to a Rollei specification), given a high enough order quantity, but the recent (last few years) Arista brand films have been Kodak, Foma and Fuji. This has been discussed ad-infinitum in RFF and Apug.
EDIT. Here is a link to the factory visit RFF-thread.
teleparallel
Established
hp5+
Cause I use it.
Never shot tri-x. I shot, fuji. But I like hp5+.
Cause I use it.
Never shot tri-x. I shot, fuji. But I like hp5+.
oilman930
Established
I voted other...
Classic emulsions: Plus-X and Verichrome Pan.
I've got a freezer full of these two films which will last me for a while.
Current emulsions: Ilford Pan F.
Classic emulsions: Plus-X and Verichrome Pan.
I've got a freezer full of these two films which will last me for a while.
Current emulsions: Ilford Pan F.
CK Dexter Haven
Well-known
Tri-X, historically.
Currently in love with APX100/Rollei Retro 100 in ID-11/D-76.
Currently in love with APX100/Rollei Retro 100 in ID-11/D-76.
airfrogusmc
Veteran
tri-x 320 pro 4X5 film processed in a special dilution of HC110
RobGetz
Member
This has been discussed ad-infinitum in RFF and Apug.
EDIT. Here is a link to the factory visit RFF-thread.
Oh I know it has. It's just that I still hear many different claims.
I heard from a man who recently toured the ilford plant that ilford and kodak were now supplying the edu/arista line. Edit: They were the ones who told him this. I can't verify that but that's what he told me.
I also read through that thread and I don't see a mention anywhere that this is supplying the arista line.
nikon_sam
Shooter of Film...
I voted for Acros 100...I have about 120 rolls of Acros 100 and about 70 rolls of Neopan 400 in 120 format...
Voted for Acros 100 since I can still buy it...
Voted for Acros 100 since I can still buy it...
Bruno Gracia
Well-known
Tri X, but want to try rollei 80s and Across 100..
DNG
Film Friendly
Tri-X for me, because I can get it for $3.00 a 36x when it is re-branded.
But, Delta 400 is what I'd like to shoot...just not in the budget.
But, Delta 400 is what I'd like to shoot...just not in the budget.
ssmc
Well-known
I voted HP5+, but I'm about equally a fan of Tri-X. I think it's hard to go wrong with either one. When shooting in harsh desert sunlight, HP5+ gave almost delicate images with "creamy" mid-tones, while Tri-X seems to have more "punch". But a lot of that could be down to processing as I send my negs to NCPS for developing and scanning. They're both great, just different.
For lens testing (i.e. shooting maps taped to a wall) I use Delta 100, but I find I get uneven results with that film in real-world use - sometimes it's great, sometimes it's... not so great.
For lens testing (i.e. shooting maps taped to a wall) I use Delta 100, but I find I get uneven results with that film in real-world use - sometimes it's great, sometimes it's... not so great.
zsas
Established
Darn. Forgot PanF. Different films in the arista line are manufactured by either kodak or ilford, depending on who you ask.
I prob shd have been more clear, my vote for other was PanF+
Harry Lime
Practitioner
Tri-X
Followed by TMY-2 400, Delta 3200 and FP4+.
Followed by TMY-2 400, Delta 3200 and FP4+.
alfredian
Well-known
Plus-X, while it lasts
Plus-X, while it lasts
Plus-X. While my supplies in 120 & 135 hold out. Goes back to first-roll-of-35 ever shot, back in 1969 (Minolta SRT101). Wish I'd picked up on Verichrome Pan, which was "Mom's film in 620 for the Bakelite Brownie she used. I recall seeing boxed 35mm VP waaaay back, but gave it a pass. KB25 is another fave gone the way of the Kodasaur.
Probably changing to FP4 & HP4 & Pan-F. Odd, but I visit Upstate NY where I grew up and find myself putting Ilford Film into my M4-P & M5 bodies. Irony?
Plus-X, while it lasts
Plus-X. While my supplies in 120 & 135 hold out. Goes back to first-roll-of-35 ever shot, back in 1969 (Minolta SRT101). Wish I'd picked up on Verichrome Pan, which was "Mom's film in 620 for the Bakelite Brownie she used. I recall seeing boxed 35mm VP waaaay back, but gave it a pass. KB25 is another fave gone the way of the Kodasaur.
Probably changing to FP4 & HP4 & Pan-F. Odd, but I visit Upstate NY where I grew up and find myself putting Ilford Film into my M4-P & M5 bodies. Irony?
Benjamin Marks
Veteran
My "favorite" has changed over the years.
In 35mm:
Years 1-7 Tri-X in D76 (loved the classic look)
Years 8-20 Ilford Delta 400 in XTOL 1:1 (loved the finer grain and found the Delta films less finicky than TMAX)
Years 21-30 Fuji Neopan 400 in XTOL 1:1 and in Patrick Gainer's Vitamin C-Phenidone homebrew (loved the grainier grain)
In Medium format: any 320-400 speed film I could find
In Larger Format (4x5, 8x10): any emulsion at all.
A point of clarification: For many years I would keep a slow film and a fast film around. So: PanF or Pantomic X when I wanted fine grain, Plus-X or FP4 when I wanted medium speed and Tri-X or Delta 400 as my "standard." This would have been a standard menu in, say, 1991.
In 35mm:
Years 1-7 Tri-X in D76 (loved the classic look)
Years 8-20 Ilford Delta 400 in XTOL 1:1 (loved the finer grain and found the Delta films less finicky than TMAX)
Years 21-30 Fuji Neopan 400 in XTOL 1:1 and in Patrick Gainer's Vitamin C-Phenidone homebrew (loved the grainier grain)
In Medium format: any 320-400 speed film I could find
In Larger Format (4x5, 8x10): any emulsion at all.
A point of clarification: For many years I would keep a slow film and a fast film around. So: PanF or Pantomic X when I wanted fine grain, Plus-X or FP4 when I wanted medium speed and Tri-X or Delta 400 as my "standard." This would have been a standard menu in, say, 1991.
sebastel
coarse art umbrascriptor
APX 100
(10 char)
(10 char)
MartinP
Veteran
I also read through that thread and I don't see a mention anywhere that this is supplying the arista line.
Then why are there large amounts of Arista-EDU boxes in the photographs of the goods-out area?
The only two Arista films on the Freestyle website are these, with the country of origin quoted alongside:
Arista Premium - "made in USA"
Arista EDU - "made in Czech Republic"
Some of the papers carrying the Arista brand are "made in the UK" (Harman Technologies ie.Ilford) but they are off-topic for this thread.
filmfan
Well-known
You mean film?
Gabriel M.A.
My Red Dot Glows For You
Ilford XP2 Super
It's tied at #1 w/Tri-X for me.
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