moltogordo
Member
I'd like to thank all of you who participated in my posts and gave me much advice and encouragement. I have a new film friend.
What do I think of Fomapan 400? Well, I just ordered 10 rolls of 36, 10 rolls of 24, and a 100' bulk roll for my half-frame cameras. I love the stuff. It really is a throwback, and what I like about it is that it changes character radically in different developers. It's not going to replace my standby HP5, but it is certainly going to augment it as my "other" ASA 400 film (along with XP2 and TMax 400)
Many of you said that it is delicate when wet, so I listened to you. I found that when I put Photo-flo in the final rinse, I was left with a bit of streaking. So I tried some Arista Flow wetting agent (I use 4 measured drops per litre) and there was almost no deposit. Anybody else found this flow to be pretty decent?
I used 2 developers - Xtol and Rodinal at 1:50. I will be trying HC110 next at 1:63, but from what I gather from Flickr posts, this splits the difference and will probably be useful. Here are some of my results and observations. By the way, I shot everything at box speed, my preference. I'll play around with other indexes as I get to know the film more intimately. The following are all scanned 5x7 prints.
Half frame, Olympus Pen FT, Rodinal 1:50, a lot like the old Tri-X, I think:
Oil Refinery, Prince George, BC - 70mm Zuiko f2.0 lens, 1/60th at f8, I believe. The day was rainy, dreary with little contrast. Foma 400 delivered a nice picture, with nice grain. Not as much grain as I was after for this purpose, but I can crop and achieve what I want, or try Rodinal at 1:20
Freezing Swamp at Cobb Lake BC, Olympus Pen FT, 100mm f3.5 Zuiko with Cambron 2x doubler. 1/125th at f8. The film has real pizzaz and contrast.
Cottonwood Tree, Nechako River area, 1/125th at f5.6. Lots of detail here, and again, real punch. I toned this one brown.
In full frame 35mm, with a Pentax MX, and 50mm f4 Pentax-M macro lens, developed in Xtol:
Almost like a different film. Grain is fine and smooth, tonal graduation nice but not subtle. A punchy film with real balls.
Forgotten Hat at Cobb Lake, 1/125th at f11, if I remember correctly; I did a bit of toning on the image:
Culvert at Cobb Lake: 1/125th at f8, should have been printed on grade 2 paper, but I only had #3 around. This was a high contrast scene, and I think Foma 400 delivered a pretty hard hitting result:
Again, thanks for looking in and keeping me in the loop with your hints and expertise! Just to let you know, the actual prints themselves really are better than these posts. I'm very happy with them.
What do I think of Fomapan 400? Well, I just ordered 10 rolls of 36, 10 rolls of 24, and a 100' bulk roll for my half-frame cameras. I love the stuff. It really is a throwback, and what I like about it is that it changes character radically in different developers. It's not going to replace my standby HP5, but it is certainly going to augment it as my "other" ASA 400 film (along with XP2 and TMax 400)
Many of you said that it is delicate when wet, so I listened to you. I found that when I put Photo-flo in the final rinse, I was left with a bit of streaking. So I tried some Arista Flow wetting agent (I use 4 measured drops per litre) and there was almost no deposit. Anybody else found this flow to be pretty decent?
I used 2 developers - Xtol and Rodinal at 1:50. I will be trying HC110 next at 1:63, but from what I gather from Flickr posts, this splits the difference and will probably be useful. Here are some of my results and observations. By the way, I shot everything at box speed, my preference. I'll play around with other indexes as I get to know the film more intimately. The following are all scanned 5x7 prints.
Half frame, Olympus Pen FT, Rodinal 1:50, a lot like the old Tri-X, I think:
Oil Refinery, Prince George, BC - 70mm Zuiko f2.0 lens, 1/60th at f8, I believe. The day was rainy, dreary with little contrast. Foma 400 delivered a nice picture, with nice grain. Not as much grain as I was after for this purpose, but I can crop and achieve what I want, or try Rodinal at 1:20

Freezing Swamp at Cobb Lake BC, Olympus Pen FT, 100mm f3.5 Zuiko with Cambron 2x doubler. 1/125th at f8. The film has real pizzaz and contrast.

Cottonwood Tree, Nechako River area, 1/125th at f5.6. Lots of detail here, and again, real punch. I toned this one brown.

In full frame 35mm, with a Pentax MX, and 50mm f4 Pentax-M macro lens, developed in Xtol:
Almost like a different film. Grain is fine and smooth, tonal graduation nice but not subtle. A punchy film with real balls.
Forgotten Hat at Cobb Lake, 1/125th at f11, if I remember correctly; I did a bit of toning on the image:

Culvert at Cobb Lake: 1/125th at f8, should have been printed on grade 2 paper, but I only had #3 around. This was a high contrast scene, and I think Foma 400 delivered a pretty hard hitting result:

Again, thanks for looking in and keeping me in the loop with your hints and expertise! Just to let you know, the actual prints themselves really are better than these posts. I'm very happy with them.
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