Javier - while the rendering of the photo's may not be quite as punchy and bold as your regular stuff (i'd kill for that kind of light to shoot in occasionally) the subject matter is spot on the money. The first shot of the couple with the sign was brilliant, and the composition of the guy with the Tattoo behind his head, looking like he's wearing some enormous "Carman Miranda meets Popeye" inspired hat really sang out.
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Had some good results with Kodak TX400, rated at 1600. Taken with a Pentax MX.
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I've just got my first few rolls from the 645N back. I'm impressed!
And a couple on Ilford HP5+ at 400
My wife's grandfather:
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[/url] tabatha cat by woodbridgeboy, on Flickr[/IMG]![]()
[/url] hidden by woodbridgeboy, on Flickr[/IMG]![]()
i think i recognise that last one woodsy, the shots you get off that RB67 are brilliant, and tempting me to move to MF when ive got 35mm sorted to a higher qualitynicely done
Woodsy:
5, 1, 4 are my picks. All told a very nice set. There is some close detail lost in 1 that you've managed to capture in 2!.
Acros & Rodinal go very well together, but I find the right amount of agitation a tricky thing i.e. too much contrast, shadow V too little contast, shadow etc.
Well done
PS they are 6 x 6?
This is without doubt the best thread on the forum at the moment. Apologies for not commenting as much as perhaps I should
Here are 6 I scanned from my last roll of acros 100. Dev'd in rodinal.
Thoughts always appreciated![]()

****but I think with film you have to go that extra mile with colour to get that WOW factor****
erm I think it's the other way around in that a shot has to be extra VG in tones and subject matter in B/W, and not forgetting different filters are needed to get best results.
IMHO many B/W shots posted here fail because of tones esp when the subject is a mass of similar greys and has no bite.
I got the flush of posting after seeing the last two or three great pages and just got back three films from Photo Express in Hull, so lots to work on and posts when possible.
Taken with my F90X and Nikkor 35-70mm, Fuji Superia 200Asa.
I hope you like and give your views, please.Sorry about the sky what you see is what I got.![]()
****but I think with film you have to go that extra mile with colour to get that WOW factor****
erm I think it's the other way around in that a shot has to be extra VG in tones and subject matter in B/W, and not forgetting different filters are needed to get best results.
IMHO many B/W shots posted here fail because of tones esp when the subject is a mass of similar greys and has no bite.
Some very interesting points being made here that are very pertinent to how I am now and have been for several weeks (indeed I mentioned to Mark recently that I have a yearning to shoot some colour in my 'workflow')
I wrestle with learning :-
1. Pictures (simple, but oh so frustrating)
2. Film? So many shades / speeds (please, even though I know you mean well, do not say 100 in the Summer and 400 in the winter)
3. Developers! The pain of it...
4. Developing - Much agitated agitation!
5. Contrast - Arrgh!
6. Last but NEVER least the capabilities of the camera and the lens
As for black and white, err, yes and no. I am uping a picture here taken in duff dull light with a backdrop of fawn (dirty sandstone)
I v'e named it "Catch Me If You Can
Sheffield. UK
Minolta Autocord (120 6x6) - Ilford HP5+ - LC29
Now there are any amount of shades in there that can only ever be shades of black or white - No? Yes?
Thoughts please
Mark I wholeheartedly agree with you. On another website I occasionally frequent there are any number of badly composed, technically imperfect shots but because they are b&w and on film they get high praise.
The rules still apply whether it be digi, film, pinhole or any other future photographic technique, if its crap its crap. I'm no Ansell Adams (more Gomez actually) but I do try and produce interesting images and I don't post the ones that I think are crap.
Andy

Sorry, Brian I think you are wrong, the genre cliques at the present time is all about B&W and even bad shots get good acclaim colour on the other hand seems to be treated like dig-tail, with contempt.
I agree with your second para and that is my point,all film shots need care and attention, but B&W seem to need less:thumbsdown:
Also I think that I may have misled you I was talking about our forum and not the Film genre in general.![]()
***Some pictures just DON'T HAVE those tones***
Indeed, but colour film can separate the different colours better which would be close shades of grey in B/W.........if you have a problem, .
e.g.
Sorry, Brian I think you are wrong, the genre cliques at the present time is all about B&W and even bad shots get good acclaim colour on the other hand seems to be treated like dig-tail, with contempt.
I agree with your second para and that is my point,all film shots need care and attention, but B&W seem to need less:thumbsdown:
Also I think that I may have misled you I was talking about our forum and not the Film genre in general.![]()
IMHO, the problems start when people start doing it the other way around, and shoot on film like they do on a Digital Camera. I've seen lots of shots taken on film that people have posted and had they have been in the Critique section I'm afraid i'd have panned them. Just because it's shot on film, it doesn't instantly transform it into art (even if you ARE an art student!) Taking a grainy black and white shot doesn't make you Robert Capa or Henri Cartier-Bresson.
Don't get me wrong - there are some brilliant and truly inspirational pictures in this thread. But there are some fairly average ones as well, and to be honest, they would benefit from being posted in the Critique section instead of here, where the person who posted the shot could be helped to take better images. And I'm not just having a go at others - I freely admit that my shots are not to the standard I wish to take, and I really appreciate the time that people take in giving critique on my shots, and I hope that i've not upset anyone by any critique I've given in the other section - anything I've said has been with the honest wish to help others improve their art. There - i've said the A word. Art. That's what we're supposed to be trying to produce here. Something that by just being here, can stimulate, influence or affect other people on a emotional or intellectual level.
If the shot was composed mainly of that doll house, you could get a decent BW in terms solid, separate tones. Put on a green filter, meter the tan walls to be placed 3 stops above middle gray and I suspect you'd get white walls, really dark door/window sidings and near middle gray on the roof.
An old trick you can do with a flat negative is to process it in a dilution of Selenium Toner. It should expand some of the higher values yielding better separation of tones.