Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1996/04/29
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]I read Curt's comments on film choices and techniques and Eric's and Marc's respose to those comments with some interest. I have been thinking of putting up a short posting on my own experiences and soliciting other's views, so I will add a few comments of my own to what has already been posted. 1) Like Marc, I have found contrast control with TMax 400 to be a bit of a problem. I am careful, but I don't have regular access to a good darkroom and so temperature control could be the problem. I have found Delta 400 to be much easier to control and to give very nice results if souped in HC110 and I have heard that D-76/ID-11 work well with it too. However, I am finicky about mid-range contrast and I find that I have a (very personal, subjective) preference for the very smooth tonal scale that I can get with HP5+ when I am shooting with my Leica. It seems to be a cheaper, less finicky alternative to TMax 400, although admittedly, it does not have as fine grain. I like to develop it in Edwal's FG-7 which gives a tight, sharp grain pattern and a very pretty tonal scale. It works well with HC110 too and it is supposed to work very nicely with Microphen. Incidentally, I had an extended e-mail chat with a fellow who posts on rec.photo.darkroom about Microphen, which he has come to use all the time with TMax films. He swears that at 1:3 and 75F it works very well with both TMax 100 and TMax 400 and that it is easier to control contrast with it than with TMax RS developer. 2) Like Curt, my preferences in a medium speed film have not yet completely settled. It looks as though I will probably settle on either TMax 100, Delta 100 or FP4+, probably one of the latter two. However, I do not really like what HC110 does with medium speed films, even at a fairly high dilution. Popular Photography ran an article in Dec `79 in which they argued that when you developed both the medium and the high speed films of the day in D-76, there really wasn't much reason for preferring the medium to the high speed films. FP4 in D-76 just wasn't that much better than Tri-X in D76: the grain was only marginally smaller and the tonal content only a little better. They suggested that to get the most out of medium speed films, you need a developer that gives you high accutance and squeezes every bit of tonal information out of your negatives. Their vote went to Rodinal at a 1:50, 1:75 or 1:100 dilutions. Although I think that HC110 does better on the accutance/tonal scale front than does D-76, and we are now dealing with a new generation of films, I still have a definite preference for Rodinal when it comes to medium speed and slow films. It has a reputation for producing very grainy negs, but in my experience, it only does that when you start trying to push the film: even just a couple of extra minutes in the developer can give you much more noticable grain. (That said, it is possible to increase contrast with Rodinal by lowering the dilution to 1:25, so Zone system control is certainly not ruled out.) I have recently been discussing Rodinal's merits with a fellow who has been using it for many years and insists that unless you overdevelop it, you won't notice the difference in grain between it and D-76 until you get up to fairly high degrees of enlargement - say 8x. I have found that the grain I get with TMax 100 is only marginally larger than what I get using TMax RS developer. The only penalty that I have noticed is that you might lose a little speed - usually 1/3 of stop compared to D-76 - but you also tend to get a little better shadow detail, so that may only matter if you are really worried about Zone 1 densities. The speed loss seems to vary tremendously with film type too. Like Marc, I can recommend the Rodinal 1:50/TMax 100 combination, although I usually shoot it at ISO 64 or 50: the negatives are very sharp and have an enormous amount of detail and the tones are very nicely distinguished. I have only used a little Delta 100/Rodinal, but I like the results that I have been able to get and many people have been reporting very good results and high ISOs with the combination. I plan to do more experimenting and this may well turn out to be the combination that I go with, as it seems to be very sharp, easy to control, and to have a very nice `feel'. That said, I have found that FP4+ seems to have a smoother tonal scale and that, like HP5+, I like the `feel' of that scale with my Summicron. 3) Pan F+ and APX25 both are wonderful in Rodinal 1:50. Well, that's about all that I have to pass on for now. I look forward to hearing about others' favourite combinations: this discussion has been very interesting. Gary Toop