theguy
Newbie
I was wondering which film you use for which occasion, circumstance or situation.
Which brand/-s would you recommend?
Where are the advantages or disadvantages of a certain film?
How are the results?
It would be great, if some of you could throw in a few insights,
concerning the choice of film.
Regards, theguy =)
Which brand/-s would you recommend?
Where are the advantages or disadvantages of a certain film?
How are the results?
It would be great, if some of you could throw in a few insights,
concerning the choice of film.
Regards, theguy =)
fuwen
Well-known
I am now using VC160 and VC400 colour negatives.
No particular reasons, just that I am a long time supporter of Kodak. I miss their Ektar 25 colour negative though .............
No particular reasons, just that I am a long time supporter of Kodak. I miss their Ektar 25 colour negative though .............
Keith
The best camera is one that still works!
For slow film I love PanF+ at 50 ISO or pushed a stop for a little more contrast. For 100 ISO I'm currently using Rollei Retro or Acros and for 400 ISO Legacy Pro (Neopan 400). The Legacy Pro is very good when pushed to 1600.
When the Legacy Pro runs out I'll probably switch back to Tri-X for a while ... I just bought 400ft of Arista Premium 400 which is the same emulsion apparently!
Oh yes I forgot large format (4x5) ... currently using Chines Era 100 and very impressed with it!
When the Legacy Pro runs out I'll probably switch back to Tri-X for a while ... I just bought 400ft of Arista Premium 400 which is the same emulsion apparently!
Oh yes I forgot large format (4x5) ... currently using Chines Era 100 and very impressed with it!
Juan Valdenebro
Truth is beauty
I use three kinds of film: slow 100, fast 400, and ultrafast 3200. Ultrafast 3200 film covers me from real low light with a fast lens wide open, to prefocused, well stopped-down use on overcast days (or shadows) for huge depth of field.
Fast 400 film gives me huge depth of field under direct sun, and narrow depth of field on overcast.
Slow 100 film for narrow depth of field on sunny days.
Cheers,
Juan
Fast 400 film gives me huge depth of field under direct sun, and narrow depth of field on overcast.
Slow 100 film for narrow depth of field on sunny days.
Cheers,
Juan
Mister E
Well-known
I shoot anything Neopan, but Neopan 1600 in particular is my favorite B&W film. I also like Ilford Pan F+ 50, but I won't buy more of it because it's too pricey. For color I love Velvia 50.
Ranchu
Veteran
Kodak Portra 400VC. I don't change it really, I like it! Insights....? For color, use pro film. Try the kodak, try the fuji, you'll likely prefer the colors of one or the other. I wish I could afford to shoot fuji 400X more often, I really do.
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flip
良かったね!
HP5+ pushed / Fuji 800Z for low light.
Fomapan 200 / Fuji Neopan 100 for daylight.
If I could get cheap, bulk Fuji Neopan 1600 I would buy oodles -- that film just gives up the goods. I have some Fuji 400 on the way and look forward to experimenting.....
Fomapan 200 / Fuji Neopan 100 for daylight.
If I could get cheap, bulk Fuji Neopan 1600 I would buy oodles -- that film just gives up the goods. I have some Fuji 400 on the way and look forward to experimenting.....
hipsterdufus
Photographer?
Shooting some old Tmax 400 stand developed in Rodinal 1:100. This is the original T-Max that I had left over from college courses almost 10 years ago. Shoots great and the film has an absolutely beautiful look to it in the Rodinal. I shoot a lot of portraiture, and the skin tones "glow" with the Tmax. Suits my style of photography particularly well.
Here's an example with very little post-processing:
Once that runs out, I will be switching to Arista Premium 400 to see how that goes. Supposedly, it's Tri-X (or so the rumors go). I'd really like to try a classic emulsion, so I'm pretty excited.
Here's an example with very little post-processing:

Once that runs out, I will be switching to Arista Premium 400 to see how that goes. Supposedly, it's Tri-X (or so the rumors go). I'd really like to try a classic emulsion, so I'm pretty excited.
shyoon
Well-known
Neopan 400 and 1600 usually. Both look great when developed in XTOL 1:1. Lovely tones and just the right amount of grain in Neopan 1600.
As for colour film, currently shooting what's left of my batch of Kodachrome 64. Hoping to run some Portra 400NC through my cameras soon as well. A friend of mine gets incredible results from this film, so I'm looking forward to trying it out myself.
As for colour film, currently shooting what's left of my batch of Kodachrome 64. Hoping to run some Portra 400NC through my cameras soon as well. A friend of mine gets incredible results from this film, so I'm looking forward to trying it out myself.
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gavinlg
Veteran
For color film I'm currently using Kodak ektar, portra 160nc and portra 400nc. I need to experiment with the fuji equivalents some more though.
My fave b&w film is by far neopan 1600. I can't really seem to get a look I really love out of any other b&w film.
My fave b&w film is by far neopan 1600. I can't really seem to get a look I really love out of any other b&w film.
panchro-press
Member
Tri-X in rolls and sheets for everything.
Dave
Dave
thegman
Veteran
Ektar, Velvia, Portra. For B&W I much prefer XP2 or BW400CN, for easy scanning, fine grain, and smoothness.
johannielscom
Snorting silver salts
that's a nice list, right?
that's a nice list, right?
I like to experiment on occasions, you see...
that's a nice list, right?
- Kodak Tmax 100 (in 135 and 120)
- Kodak Tmax 400 (in 135 and 120, also rated at 1600)
- Kodacolor 200
- Kodacolor 400
- Kodak E100G
- Kodak 160NC (in 120)
- Kodak EDUPE (rated at 50, cross processed in C41)
- Kodak Panatomic (will do someday, 100ft roll expired 1985 in fridge)
- Kodak Tri-X (will do someday, 50ft roll in fridge)
- Ilford Delta 100 Pro (also rated at 400)
- Agfachrome 1000RS (in 120, rated as 200, expired 1988)
- Fomapan Classic 100
- Fomapan 200 (in 135 and 120)
- Rollei 25, 100 and 400
- Adox 100
- Fuji slidefilm (will do someday, 100ft roll expired 1982 in fridge)
I like to experiment on occasions, you see...
raytoei@gmail.com
Veteran
i currently have tri-x and acros 100 as my old faithful. And i am experimenting with neopan 1600, tmax, fomapan, and plus-x.
cheers!
cheers!
Keith
The best camera is one that still works!
Neopan 400 and 1600 usually. Both look great when developed in XTOL 1:1. Lovely tones and just the right amount of grain in Neopan 1600.
As for colour film, currently shooting what's left of my batch of Kodachrome 64. Hoping to run some Portra 400NC through my cameras soon as well. A friend of mine gets incredible results from this film, so I'm looking forward to trying it out myself.
Xtol is the only developer that works totally the way I want with Neopan ... and as you say 1+1
Occasionally I'll run a few rolls through with Rodinal for a change but I always return to Xtol!
NickTrop
Veteran
One of the advantages of digital is the much under-used/discussed film emulation packages that do a pretty accurate job of replicating the look of a myriad of films. The beauty of this is that you can change "the film" you used to take the shot after you shoot. Using such software regularly, you find you get into a "routine" of what film you select - after the fact, for certain subjects:
- Children: Kodak Portra VC or Ultracolor 100
- Young adult portrait: Portra NC
- Adult portrait - Tri-X black and white, low contrast setting
- Old people portrait: Tri-X (regular contrast)
- Dark non-rural setting: black and white - match film to ISO used to take shot (seems to matter more than "what film"...)
- Bright, outdoors, colorful: Slide film that matches ISO used w/ camera. Velvia 50, Kodachrome 25 sometimes.
- Indoor flash "grab shots" with people I often use Ektachrome 100 - the 70's emulation with a blue-ish tint. Reminds me of the way the snaps I used to see when I was a kid looked. Very 70's, but kinda cool retro look. I like it. Subtle but noticeable - if that makes sense.
General rule of thumb:
black and white people - Tri-X, low contrast
old peole - Tri-X regular contrast
black and white low light - TMAX - 3200
Outdoor, colorful - slide film with saturated color - Velvia, Kodachrome 25
Typical indoor group shot with a flash - Ektachrome 100
- Children: Kodak Portra VC or Ultracolor 100
- Young adult portrait: Portra NC
- Adult portrait - Tri-X black and white, low contrast setting
- Old people portrait: Tri-X (regular contrast)
- Dark non-rural setting: black and white - match film to ISO used to take shot (seems to matter more than "what film"...)
- Bright, outdoors, colorful: Slide film that matches ISO used w/ camera. Velvia 50, Kodachrome 25 sometimes.
- Indoor flash "grab shots" with people I often use Ektachrome 100 - the 70's emulation with a blue-ish tint. Reminds me of the way the snaps I used to see when I was a kid looked. Very 70's, but kinda cool retro look. I like it. Subtle but noticeable - if that makes sense.
General rule of thumb:
black and white people - Tri-X, low contrast
old peole - Tri-X regular contrast
black and white low light - TMAX - 3200
Outdoor, colorful - slide film with saturated color - Velvia, Kodachrome 25
Typical indoor group shot with a flash - Ektachrome 100
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NathanJD
Well-known
I have a fair few foot of HP5+ that i've been working through and some out of date Kodak Gold 200 left over from a holiday last year that i use when i decide to shoot colour on those rare occasions.
I am planning to buy a little bunch of films soon and also some different developers to try and expand my knowledge a bit and really pin down my ideal combo.
I am planning to buy a little bunch of films soon and also some different developers to try and expand my knowledge a bit and really pin down my ideal combo.
Tim Gray
Well-known
I think I'm one of the few that doesn't dig Neopan 1600. Way too pushed looking at 1600. I always wondered what it offers over Tri-X/T-Max 400/HP5+/etc pushed to 1600?
I like Plus-X, Tri-X, T-Max 400 and 3200 as my B&W films. Mostly use Tri-X, but am mixing in more T-Max 400. I find ISO 400 film is a good default speed for me.
In color, it's Portra. They are all nice, but again, kind of default to Portra 400NC. I don't shoot as much slow color film, but Portra 160VC and Ektar are my choices there.
I don't shoot much slide.
I like Plus-X, Tri-X, T-Max 400 and 3200 as my B&W films. Mostly use Tri-X, but am mixing in more T-Max 400. I find ISO 400 film is a good default speed for me.
In color, it's Portra. They are all nice, but again, kind of default to Portra 400NC. I don't shoot as much slow color film, but Portra 160VC and Ektar are my choices there.
I don't shoot much slide.
keepright
matthew
I'd been using Portra 400NC for a while, but tried a roll of Ektar 100, and all of my favourite photos of that weekend were from it. I have my last two rolls of 400NC in the shop right now - shot with my Zeiss and F100 simultaneously - and now have another roll of Ektar loaded in the Ikon.
I can't decide if I should be trying out a few others, or just settle down. I'm monogamous at heart.
But I do have the occasional fling with Provia 400X for special occasions.
For the occasional B&W, I use XP2. C41's just too convenient, but once I'm done a big trip to New York this fall, I might try doing my own developing.
I can't decide if I should be trying out a few others, or just settle down. I'm monogamous at heart.
But I do have the occasional fling with Provia 400X for special occasions.
For the occasional B&W, I use XP2. C41's just too convenient, but once I'm done a big trip to New York this fall, I might try doing my own developing.
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