papo
Established
I know that it also depends on what developer you may use but generally speaking, i am looking for film that has depth in greytones, something i am looking for in shooting landscape/architecture. Any idea? Thanks
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Deleted member 65559
Guest
Assuming i'm shooting landscapes, i almost always use a tripod, so film speed doesn't matter much to me. So exposure/development decisions & filtration (yellow, orange or green) The outcome (for me since i wet print) depends as well on which paper & paper developer combo i'm thinking of. Almost always for me, Ilford FP4 is my choice( in all formats 35,120 & 5x7). I develop in Pyrocat HD in glycol & print on FB papers Ilford Classic or WT or Foma Variant iii in Formulary Ansco 130 or LPD.
Kai-san
Filmwaster
For lovely grey tones I would recommend Fomapan 100. It's a finegrained film with good contrast and I like the results I get developing it in Xtol. I scan my films, I do not wet print.
v0sh
Established
FP4 + D-76 is a nice combination for that purpose.
Dan Daniel
Well-known
Give a Green-Yellow filter a try- XO is Hoya's name for it, maybe others use the same. Rollei has a Light Green- Hellgrun- which is very similar. It lightens leaves a bit, and I've found it gives more room for how trees and such render in B&W.
All in all, it's really going to be your experience running up against what you really want. So many factors involved...
All in all, it's really going to be your experience running up against what you really want. So many factors involved...
retinax
Well-known
I have to ask - what is depth in greytones?
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