A few from my second roll shot yesterday at the dance. I developed this one a bit longer (a little over 13 minutes instead of the recommended 12.5) but it made no difference; I think I just underexposed them. I was able to rescue them to some extent in post by working on the scans and I like how some of them came out.
fjablo wrote:
So the question is whether the resolution from the bigger surface area of Delta 3200 in 120 is negated when it's pushed to 6400, compared to a lower-speed film in 35mm.
I don't think it is. If I had exposed these properly at ISO 6400, I think you'd see quite a bit less grain and more detail (a lot of what you're seeing in these images is probably digital noise, as I had to bring up the shadows and brightness in the scans).
But it's a good question, and given the good things I've heard and seen about Kentmere pushed to 1600 maybe I'll try that next time using my Nikon and some f1.4 lenses.
- 1/125 at f/4 and ISO 6400 is the exact same exposure as 1/125 f/2 and ISO 1600
- DOF and framing would be roughly the same if you use a 35mm f/2 lens on 35mm vs 80mm at f/4 on 120
So the question is whether the resolution from the bigger surface area of Delta 3200 in 120 is negated when it's pushed to 6400, compared to a lower-speed film in 35mm.
At lower speeds (e.g. ISO 400 vs 100) I'd lean towards 120 still being superior. But at those extreme ISO ratings, not so sure. ...Show more →
One minor point, framing/composition would only be the same in your comparison if the aspect ratio is the same, unlike with this example. Definitely food for thought though.
johnld wrote:
I got my seaplane rating in a Super Cub very much like the one in the first photo. Stall strips make that cub fly nice and slow too.
When it comes to floatplanes, it's all DeHavilland in my part of the world... With the odd Cessna 185 here and there. So it was cool to see such a wide variety at the Lake Hood Seaplane Base.
As a bonus, the museum there had an open house complete with live tunes. GA645i + Pro 400H
Partial first frame of the roll. Selden Pass (10,898 ft) with Mount Senger in the distance. Along the Pacific Crest Trail, John Muir Wilderness, Sierra National Forest.