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Thread: B&W film for high contrast ?

  1. #1

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    B&W film for high contrast ?

    Hello,

    It seems lately the days I have off for photos are bright and clear...I have a shooting window from 10 am to 12 lunch. I am trying to advoid high contrast situations but sometimes this is a no win situation..one can use contrast to produce a great image and I am learning this slowly. My question is are there any B&W films that handle high contrast better..so a little more detail is visible and the contrast is not so harsh.I am shooting Agfa APX100...maybe a 400 asa film would be a better direction to go.

    Thanks Gerry

  2. #2

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    Re: B&W film for high contrast ?

    Fortepan 400 will capture the greatest contrast range (see reference below). HP5 or TMY are capable of capturing a greater contrast range than most other films. Pyrocat-HD or HC-110 are good developers for semi-stand to compress the tonal range. I have done a 14 stop range with TMY and Pyrocat-HD, 18 stops are possible.

    http://unblinkingeye.com/Articles/PC-HD/pc-hd.html
    Last edited by Ron Marshall; 21-Nov-2006 at 06:20.

  3. #3

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    Re: B&W film for high contrast ?

    in general, 400 ISO films are less contrasty than slower films. Also, a variation in the developer and agitation can go a long way toward controlling contrast. I find HP5+ excellent for highcontrast scenes when used with a variety of developers so long as time and agitation are controlled.

  4. #4
    Donald Qualls's Avatar
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    Re: B&W film for high contrast ?

    I'd suggest that not only do Forte (aka Classic and .EDU Made in Hungary) and TMY capture exceptional range, the Forte also has a very good response to N+ and N- development, about the best I've encountered (though I honestly haven't tried a whole bunch of films for this). Forte also has the advantage of being very reasonably priced, especially in the Freestyle boxes...

    One very important difference to be aware of -- TMY captures a wide range by simply refusing to block up; it'll go up to Zone XII or XIII without losing detail (though the range may exceed what you can print without trickery), but you still want to expose by metering normally. Fortepan, OTOH, *will* block up beyond Zone IX or X if you don't apply a development control, which will require that you increase exposure slightly to compensate.
    If a contact print at arm's length is too small to see, you need a bigger camera. :D

  5. #5
    おせわに なります! Andrew O'Neill's Avatar
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    Re: B&W film for high contrast ?

    HP5+ is generally considered a medium contrast film.

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