different!How is an ISO 1600 film different from a 400 film pushed to 1600? Both seem to have a lot of grain. Are the emulsions different somehow, or are they simply re-packaged and labeled for push processing?
A push development doesn't (materially) increase the light sensitivity of a negative film.
What it does is increase the contrast.
If you under-expose a film by two stops (expose a 400 ISO film to the amount of light that a 1600 ISO film is designed for), and then give it a two stop push development, your shadows will remain without detail, but the darker midtones and midtones will improve in appearance, because their contrast will have been increased.
Are you asking theoretically?
Because, practically, 400 @1600 cost something reasonable if in bulk.
I use hp5 and K400 @1600.
But I print, not scan. Grain talk usually comes from scanners![]()
Patrick, I just read a comment of yours on the thread John suggested above. You said, for low light, to simply open up the lens and shoot the slowest speed you can hand hold. That is brilliant advice, and I don't know why I never thought of that. I've always gotten good results indoors, but was always checking my metering, which was cumbersome.To simplify, the larger grain size of the faster film is more sensitive to light.
If I remember correctly back when I shot a lot of fast film TMax 3200 was really more like a 1000 speed film, and Delta 3200 was more around 1250. I don't know what they would really be now. Been a long time.
As has already been mentioned, the shadow detail will be better with the faster film at any given speed.
I have film developed at 400 and pushed to 1600 that I can compare. I've never yet bought native 1600 or 3200 film to try. I guess I should. Thanks for linking to that thread. That was helpful.hi ariston
not sure if you saw this thread
https://www.photrio.com/forum/threads/experiences-with-delta-3200.146679/page-3
you might push some of your native 400 speed to 1600 or 3200 and process it to see if you like it that way
as with everything different people describe the same exact things in different ways. there's a whole slew
( well maybe 1 or 2 ) different developers that will increase the virtual speed of film without increasing too much of the
grain and dropping shadows out too much ( or so they say ). 1600 from 400 is only 1 stop for the most part ( at least with tmy )
seeing kodak says if you shoot it at 800 develop it like you would at 400.
Tmax 400 @ 1600 is better than Tri-X @ 1600 ? This is new info for me. I've been in a believe that Tmax 400 doesn't give decent results when pushed. Last winter I pushed HP5 to 1600 (I don't like it at 400) and I liked it pushed. Really similar to Tri-X pushed, but I think Tri-X maintains shadows a bit better than HP5 when both pushed to 1600. Not a big difference and maybe more opinion. HP5 is cheaper too and it's so shallow differnece that I'm probably still going to buy HP5 for pushing.
I need to choose a 1600 pushable film for the winter (buying a batch) so really interested hearing your experiences!
That is because Tmax is a tabular film and Tri-X is traditional grain film. Tabular film as smaller grain.
Does grain affect to how film can handle shardow area exposure? I think Tri-X grain pushed 1600 is not that bad at all. Of course more visible. However I'm only interested in the contrast/shadow detail behavior when pushing.
Patrick, I just read a comment of yours on the thread John suggested above. You said, for low light, to simply open up the lens and shoot the slowest speed you can hand hold. That is brilliant advice, and I don't know why I never thought of that. I've always gotten good results indoors, but was always checking my metering, which was cumbersome.
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