Very nice red filter work, Peter. I just found, quite by accident, a red, green, medium yellow and blue filter in the bottom of the case housing my Crown Graphic 4X5.
Very nice portrait! This TMAX 400 looks very nice, can't wait to finish up my own to develop! This is my very first film try! Would you mind my asking the conditions you shot in, and, also the settings used, aperture, etc.? even though I assume this may have been at 2.8, judging basically on the bokeh? Thank you!
Thanks! I was actually pleasantly surprised at how TMAX 400 looks when it's pushed to 1600, I don't have much experience with it.
I use HC-110, 1:50 ratio for 8 minutes when I'm developing at the normal 400 speed. For 1600, I tried 14 minutes.
As for the camera, I think it was actually f/4. Conditions were indoor lighting at night.
a.RodriguezPix wrote:
Very nice portrait! This TMAX 400 looks very nice, can't wait to finish up my own to develop! This is my very first film try! Would you mind my asking the conditions you shot in, and, also the settings used, aperture, etc.? even though I assume this may have been at 2.8, judging basically on the bokeh? Thank you!
Here is one from my trip to Turkey, more will come in the following days.
Mamiya 7II + 43mm + Ilford Pan F+ (I think with a 25A Red filter/possible a CPL can't remember ) + Dev in D-76
(sorry for making it so big, Flickr changed they way you share...)
adnan76 wrote:
Thanks! I was actually pleasantly surprised at how TMAX 400 looks when it's pushed to 1600, I don't have much experience with it.
I use HC-110, 1:50 ratio for 8 minutes when I'm developing at the normal 400 speed. For 1600, I tried 14 minutes.
As for the camera, I think it was actually f/4. Conditions were indoor lighting at night.
Please excuse my ignorance, and new to film speak, but, when you say pushed to 1600, does this mean that you set the camera to 1600, or you develop it too 1600? I would just guess it means camera setting, since, that seems kind of logical?! xD
Either way, it looks really nice, and even much so at 1600!!
adnan76 wrote:
Thanks! I was actually pleasantly surprised at how TMAX 400 looks when it's pushed to 1600, I don't have much experience with it.
I use HC-110, 1:50 ratio for 8 minutes when I'm developing at the normal 400 speed. For 1600, I tried 14 minutes.
As for the camera, I think it was actually f/4. Conditions were indoor lighting at night.
Please excuse my ignorance, and new to film speak, but, when you say pushed to 1600, does this mean that you set the camera to 1600, or you develop it too 1600? I would just guess it means camera setting, since, that seems kind of logical?! xD
Either way, it looks really nice, and even much so at 1600!!
a.RodriguezPix wrote:
Please excuse my ignorance, and new to film speak, but, when you say pushed to 1600, does this mean that you set the camera to 1600, or you develop it too 1600? I would just guess it means camera setting, since, that seems kind of logical?! xD
Either way, it looks really nice, and even much so at 1600!!
You set the camera for ISO1600 AND then develop the film according to ISO1600 instructions. Easy as pie!
a.RodriguezPix wrote:
Please excuse my ignorance, and new to film speak, but, when you say pushed to 1600, does this mean that you set the camera to 1600, or you develop it too 1600? I would just guess it means camera setting, since, that seems kind of logical?! xD
Either way, it looks really nice, and even much so at 1600!!
rattymouse wrote:
You set the camera for ISO1600 AND then develop the film according to ISO1600 instructions. Easy as pie!
As soon as I have the spare fund, I really want to try to develop my own B&W's, so that I could have a broader understanding of it, plus, so that I could learn this ancient wizardry! Thanks again, for keeping me to pace, RM! I do try to understand it firsthand, but, sometimes, it feels right, just asking the experienced ones!
a.RodriguezPix wrote:
As soon as I have the spare fund, I really want to try to develop my own B&W's, so that I could have a broader understanding of it, plus, so that I could learn this ancient wizardry! Thanks again, for keeping me to pace, RM! I do try to understand it firsthand, but, sometimes, it feels right, just asking the experienced ones!
I also want to invest in a decent budget Nikon 35mm!