The sample photos you took are beautiful. In my opinion no Black and White is the same, I love that the 'shades' this produces seem silver. Awesome job, I think this will be the film I use to test out my Olympus 35RC!!
@patcormick
3 ай бұрын
First of all big thank you on the compliment! But I also agree the tonality does seem silver right? I mean some of this could come from the scanning portion but overall I noticed the same thing.. but either way it’s such a nice stock, and with the benefit of C41 it’s a solid choice. Thanks again for the comment!
@b6983832
3 ай бұрын
Standard temperature for C-41 is not 102°F (39°C), but 100°F (37,8°C). You are using CineStill home developing kit as reference, but this kit is non-standard. It should not be treated as a reference. Use Kodak or Fuji documentation of C-41 as a general reference instead.
@patcormick
3 ай бұрын
Hey that’s a solid tip! Good to keep in mind. I would make a counter though for the proverbial argument that 102 is perfectly fine, with the difference noted as 1.2 degrees C different (arguably minimal)… and depending on how you develop the extra degree or 2 helps with cool down of chems while actually doing the process. Honestly I run my warmer to 104 or so in glass bottles just bc I know they cool a bit as they sit on the counter while I’m waiting or working with the inversions.
@alfred1975
3 ай бұрын
Nice shots! Is it just me or does this stock just look a bit bland? It seems to lack the character and grain of traditional BW
@patcormick
3 ай бұрын
Ya know… that’s usually what the drawback is with XP2. It is lower in contrast and in grain, so it doesn’t appeal to the BnW shooters as much as the traditionals. But I will say being able to put 2 rolls in a tank and get black and white and color is pretty neat. Thanks for stoke and for checking it out!
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