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Need least grainy 400 ISO film


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Hi,

 

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I hate grain! All the films in the 100 ISO range are just so much better when it comes to grain as opposed to 400 ISO films. Why such a big jump in grain going from 100 to 400?

 

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Currently I use TMax 400 and XTOL 1:2 and the grain, while better than Tri-X in D-76 1:1, is miles away from ANY 100 ISO film.

 

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Anyway which is the best film / developer combination that will give me the least grain in 400 ISO?

 

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Please help me get rid of grain!

 

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Thank you.

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TMax 400 and XTOL are a pretty good combination, though some may like

a crisper grain pattern. I don't know of anything much better. If

your subjects are low contrast, you might try pushing a slower film.

The real answer might be a larger format. Tri-X, TMax 400, and HP-5+

are all just super with a 6x6 or 6x7 neg! Better than 100 speed in

35mm, IMHO.

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A larger format is certainly one good solution. But if you must stay

with 35mm, there are a few things you can try.

 

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First of all, there is not a great deal of difference in terms of

grain between the various ISO 400 films. The difference between

HP5+, Delta 400 and TMY is negligible. So, accepting that, the only

real control you have is with processing.

 

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I don't use Xtol, but it seems pretty popular and many say it offers

a good balance between fine grain and sharpness. But if you are

already using Xtol and you're unhappy, it's time to experiment.

Before I go on, however, I'd like to suggest that you give the film

minimal exposure for necessary shadow detail and couple that with

minimal development. A thinner negative will print considerably

sharper than a dense, overdeveloped negative. Try to aim for

printing with a #3 filter.

 

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As for alternative developers, my suggestion is you try a staining

developer instead of a fine-grained developer. Fine-grained

developers tend to produce a softer, less prominent grain pattern,

with an attendent loss of acutance. I feel high acutance is

paramount with fast films. Therefore, I recommend you try PMK

developer. PMK is almost like magic to me. It produces extremely

sharp negatives and the stain masks the grain by printing as density,

which effectively fills in the gaps in the grain structure. This

lends a very smooth tonality to areas that typically scream of grain,

such as smooth-toned skies or other expansive gray areas. The first

time I printed a PMK developed negative, I was stunned at how sharp

and fine-grained the image appeared. I think you'll find this is the

answer you've been looking for.

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Mike,

 

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Special formulations that promise to keep grain under control,

usually steal one or two stops of film speed. So using a 100 ISO

emulsion can be the best solution, right from the start. If the

subject permits, take a tripod and go ahead. Or, as stated above, try

some larger format. C-41 films look great, if you can make decent

prints from them. Good luck.

 

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Cesar B.

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I'll 3rd or 4th the XP2/T400CN films.

 

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If you wish to develop yourself I've found that Ilfosol-S is a fine

grain developer with good speed. I haven't compared it with some of

the more esoteric developers but of the commonly available products

(Kodak, Agfa, Ilford) it is an excellent compromise. I use it with

HP5+ in 120 and expect Delta 400/TMAX 400 to have finer grain. I've

just found that it is a ascorbic acid formulation (like Xtol) but

I've never had the surprise expirations of Xtol.

 

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Cheers,

 

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Duane

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Thanks very much for all the kind replies.

 

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It seems the way to go is the C-41 films, i.e. XP2+. However I

process my own films.

 

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Is there a way to process the XP2+ myself? Will any conventional B&W

developer work?

 

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Thanks.

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Ilford's XP2 and Kodak's T-MAX 400 CN are both c-41 films. The

resulting image is not actually formed by silver but by dye.

I've experienced the following problems with XP2 (haven't tried T-MAX

400 CN). I don't like them vey much beacouse you cannot control the

deve.lopement process (and I don't trust those people form the

minilab), it gets easlily scratched and I don't like the tones it

produces. I don't think you'll want to go through c-41 just to

process this films (people think twice before doing it for color,

which is what it was intended for at first, so I wouldn't recomend

that much trouble to do b&w).

I'd stick to conventional T-MAX films --which BTW really DO have

finer grain than conventional films like Plus-X and Tri-X. You might

want to try a fine grain developer like micridol-x or perceptol, if

you are not extremely concerned about sharpness.

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You may also consider sticking w/ your Kodak 400 but pulling it (i.e.

set it to an ISO of 200 or 100) and stick w/ the metering that it

tells you at that ISO. I've gotten some good results that way. Also,

like said earlier, the thinner your negs, the better in lots of

situations.

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I'd recommend the new Ilford Delta 400. I've found it to be a big

improvement over the previous 400 Delta (more speed, better gradation,

nicer grain), with finer grain than Tmax 400 and more speed than HP5+.

It's my general purpose film when I need more speed than EI 50.

 

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The new D400 stains very well in PMK (much more stain than Tmax 400 -

about the same as HP5+) with very good sharpness, excellent gradation,

and smooth, fine grain. (D400 has a very different grain pattern from

the blotchy grain aggregation in evenly toned areas that's turned me

off of Delta 100.) D400/PMK image quality is virtually the same as

HP5+/PMK but with 2/3 of a stop more speed (EI 320 for D400/PMK vs

200 for HP5+/PMK). My D400/PMK negatives rival FP4+/PMK shot at EI

64, but with 2 1/3 stops more speed. With 120 D400 in PMK, I develop

by the book at 70F for 16 minutes.

 

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For more speed, D400 also does well in DD-X EI 500, albeit with more

grain than with PMK, but better image quality than Tmax 400 and more

speed than HP5+. D400/DD-X negs developed in DD-X for Ilford's

recommended time are dead on an Ilford Grade 2 (31M, 42Y) on my Omega

dichroic (diffusion) enlarger.

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To those "experts" who haven't actually tried it, C-41 is as easy and

uncritical to use as most conventional 3 bath B&W process. In

addition, it is carried out at 100 degrees, which is a heck of a lot

easier to achieve than 68 degrees (or even 75 degrees)here in Florida.

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I would like to point out the few comments placing sharpness

(acutance), and fine grain on opposite sides of the scale. I cannot

overemphaize how many comments I get on my work shot at 400 and 800

on Fuji's Neopan in FX-2. I use Nikons with prime Nikkors only, and

print the resulting negs with a 50/4 EL-Nikkor. If you can get past

the stupid (sorry- that's just my opinion) GRAIN Issue, You just

might surprise yourself.

 

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I feel however, that good lens choice can make all the difference in

the world- and there can be holes in otherwise good lenses- the

50/1.4 AI-nikkor is great from f/5.6 to 16, but is scary from 1.4 to

4. The 180/2.8 AF-N Nikkor is AWESOME wide open to f/16, but avoid 22

and 32, the depth of field isn't worth it. The 105/2.5 is great

regardless of aperture, but check your depth of field for

optimal "Bokeh".

 

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I hope that you're not working for someone other than yourself, or if

you have clients, shoot some personal test stuff with different

variables, specifically developers and EI's. If you think it looks

good enough, shoot some more and show clients. You don't know how

they'll react! Like I mentioned earlier, My EI400 and 800 shots are

unanimously sharp, and that's all I care about.

 

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And when I load rolls of Tmax 100 in the same soup- Oh My Goodness!!!

 

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In my opinion, the pursuit of high spped and fine grain is the

decline of image quality. Fine grain is done best at EI25-100. Those

looking for Fine Grain with High Speed are chasing pot of gold at the

end of rainbows- they'll never seem to quite get there.

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At least, I feel I wouldn't get there. (Same for Chromogenic-Dye

films. No other word but "yuck" comes to mind.)

 

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And I'm alot happier with my sharper, grainier shots.

 

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I would be very sad if grain didn't exist, and I'm sure all others on

this forum would agree- After all, photographs are made of grain!

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Hi,

 

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It is been just over a week since my post. I have been amazed with

the amount of response for which I am very grateful. I have had

vastly different views and ideas from y�all.

 

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Here are the suggestions I have received and my opinions for each of

them:-

 

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PUSH AN 100ISO FILM. That is a good suggestion except for the loss of

shadow detail and so not useful to me.

 

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GO FOR A LARGER FORMAT. This is bad suggestion in my opinion, even if

you ignore the extra weight of the equipment. I need a 400ISO film

because the light is low not because I like 400ISO film! Medium

format lenses are 2 stops slower than 35mm lenses. So then I would

need a 1600ISO film to compensate for the slower lenses. So I might

as well shoot 100ISO in 35mm!

 

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C-41 FILMS. This is an excellent suggestion. I shot a couple of rolls

of the Kodak variety a few years ago and checked the grain and it was

almost non existent. Sadly however I cannot process them myself and

so to use these films would imply to be at the mercy of a lab and so

thereby ruling out these films too! I have since heard that you can

use regular B&W chemistry but the grain is horrendous. So there.

 

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VARIOUS FILM DEVELOPERS LIKE PMK. This is a good suggestion. However

the amount of grain reduction, if any would be minimal. So it is not

worth my time to experiment.

 

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TRY THE NEW DELTA 400. I feel that this is the best suggestion so far

for my needs. And so I have order a roll of this film!

 

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One final note. Some have argued that sharpness is more important

than grain. That why is grain so bad? Well that is a personal

preference. I like silky smooth tonality and fine grain.

 

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Here�s hoping that the NEW Delta 400 will be the one for me!

 

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Thanks y�all!!!

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In trying to get finer grain with an EI 400 film, use a relatively standard MQ developer such as D-76 or ID-11 either straight or 1:1. A developer that contains phenidone will give slightly more graininess, while otoh it'll give a little more speed and acutance.

 

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You could of course get significantly finer grain by using Microdol-X or D-25, but your EI 400 film would become EI 200 or slower.

 

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Keep process temperatures moderate, 68F to 73F or so; significantly higher or lower will cause more graininess.

 

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Consider your water supply. Excessively hard water will cause more graininess, even if it's only used for the wash.

 

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As for running C-41, it's easy. Remember, you don't have to be concerned about color shifts; the only thing that'll change with temperature or timing variations is contrast. You can put your tank, developer and blix containers in a plastic basin waterbath kept up around 102F with running hot water, and as things cool off as you agitate the tank etc you'll have a development-end temperature of around 98F for an overall temperature of 100F. The blix goes to completion and doesn't need remotely as much temperature control.

 

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Ilford's XP-1 chemical kit was ordinary C-41 developer used at a dilution of the equivalent of about 1:1 for 5'/100F rather than the standard C-41 3'15"/100F. You can use any other C-41 developer at 1:1 with around 5'/100F as a starting point. The reason XP-1 was used at 1:1 is that a timing error at five minutes was much less significant than a timing error at 3'15" and the process was intended to be used in hand tanks.

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Chromogenic films are a little finer grained, but they have a couple

of disadvantages for wich I don't use them.

1) Low contrast, low D-Max and high "fog".

2) The results change according to the man who developed it at the

lab.

2) Very easily scratched (plus they tend to be even more scratched

beacouse of comercial lab handling.

3) When you print it (contrast from 3 to 4,5 usually) scratches

become very evident.

4) It has an ugly color (maybe only I care for this, but...).

 

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If you want fine grain whith 400 ASA, expose TMAX 400 at 320 asa and

develope in microdol-x reducing the time.

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  • 1 year later...

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