Jon Buffington

Well-Known Member
I posted a digital file in color from a week later than this image so I figured I would share this. Testing out a different film stock (foma 200) as my go to is always Kodak or Ilford, preferebly the T-Grain films. Though this is film is not as sharp or detailed, grainier, it does have a decent and different "look" to it. I may end up ordering a 100' (cheap film) as a daily shooter. Anywho, this image was captured on Foma 200, developed in hc110 dil B (super fast at 3.5 minutes dev time), Nikon n90s back, Nikon 28-85 lens with yellow/orange filter, scanned with a Kodak Pakon f135+ scanner, slight adjustments in LR6. Dicks Gap Overlook, KY part of the Big South Fork National Recreation Area.

 

AlanLichty

Moderator
Nice contrasts both on the ground as well as in the skies.

You buy the film as bulk film and make your own rolls?
 

Jon Buffington

Well-Known Member
Nice contrasts both on the ground as well as in the skies.

You buy the film as bulk film and make your own rolls?
Thank you Alan. And yes, I buy in bulk, 100' rolls which gets me approximately 18 36 exposure rolls (I can roll any length if needed). A bit more economical that way. Right now I have a 100' of TMax 100 and 400, as well as HP5+ and Kentmere 100. I have 2 bulk loaders, 1 with 400 and the other with 100 iso film...when I am out of rolled film, I just decide what type of shooting I am about to be doing and roll a few rolls accordingly. Plus, with film prices constantly on the rise, I usually stock up prior to a price increase.
 

JimFox

Moderator
Staff member
How neat Jon. It's interesting to see the difference. I also always preferred TMax, and in fact have a roll of it in one of my bags, I need to dig it out and shoot it.
 

Jon Buffington

Well-Known Member
How neat Jon. It's interesting to see the difference. I also always preferred TMax, and in fact have a roll of it in one of my bags, I need to dig it out and shoot it.
Tmax, 100 and 400 are phenomenal films...the resolving power is incredible, just limited by digitization. I have a blog post compiling real resolution of 35mm film with links to the original source...I just copy/pasted/compiled (and gave credit and links to original author!). The digitization was always the bottleneck. Here is the old post, if your interested... http://jpbuffington.com/?p=167
 
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