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-   -   Tri-X turns 60 (http://www.photobanter.com/showthread.php?t=127117)

George Kerby March 13th 14 07:20 PM

Tri-X turns 60
 
Nice article about Kodaks best B&W film...

http://moreintelligentlife.com/conte...rd/tri-x-facto
r?page=full


newshound March 13th 14 10:32 PM

Tri-X turns 60
 
On 13/03/2014 19:20, George Kerby wrote:
Nice article about Kodaks best B&W film...

http://moreintelligentlife.com/conte...rd/tri-x-facto
r?page=full


I preferred FP4. Kodachrome II every time for colour, though.

Oregonian Haruspex March 13th 14 10:44 PM

Tri-X turns 60
 
On 2014-03-13 22:32:57 +0000, newshound said:

On 13/03/2014 19:20, George Kerby wrote:
Nice article about Kodaks best B&W film...

http://moreintelligentlife.com/conte...rd/tri-x-facto
r?page=full


I preferred FP4. Kodachrome II every time for colour, though.


I still have a freezer full of Tech Pan, which I would argue was
Kodak's best B&W film.


Savageduck[_3_] March 13th 14 10:50 PM

Tri-X turns 60
 
On 2014-03-13 22:32:57 +0000, newshound said:

On 13/03/2014 19:20, George Kerby wrote:
Nice article about Kodaks best B&W film...

http://moreintelligentlife.com/conte...rd/tri-x-facto
r?page=full


I preferred FP4. Kodachrome II every time for colour, though.


The last time I used Tri-X was back in 1971 when I still had a wet darkroom.

--
Regards,

Savageduck


George Kerby March 13th 14 11:41 PM

Tri-X turns 60
 



On 3/13/14 5:44 PM, in article , "Oregonian
Haruspex" wrote:

On 2014-03-13 22:32:57 +0000, newshound said:

On 13/03/2014 19:20, George Kerby wrote:
Nice article about Kodaks best B&W film...

http://moreintelligentlife.com/conte...rd/tri-x-facto
r?page=full


I preferred FP4. Kodachrome II every time for colour, though.


I still have a freezer full of Tech Pan, which I would argue was
Kodak's best B&W film.


Tech pan was know for being grain-free, however the slow ASA kept it from
being a good general-purpose film. I used it a lot for copy work...


George Kerby March 13th 14 11:45 PM

Tri-X turns 60
 



On 3/13/14 5:50 PM, in article
2014031315504673476-savageduck1@REMOVESPAMmecom, "Savageduck"
wrote:

On 2014-03-13 22:32:57 +0000, newshound said:

On 13/03/2014 19:20, George Kerby wrote:
Nice article about Kodaks best B&W film...

http://moreintelligentlife.com/conte...rd/tri-x-facto
r?page=full


I preferred FP4. Kodachrome II every time for colour, though.


The last time I used Tri-X was back in 1971 when I still had a wet darkroom.


Stainless steel reels, or those plastic ones where you "worked" the roll on
from the outside to the center?

When I conquered the ss reels and loaded film without any crimps,
undeveloped area, or resulting 'half-moons', I thought I was king of the
world!


Savageduck[_3_] March 13th 14 11:59 PM

Tri-X turns 60
 
On 2014-03-13 23:45:00 +0000, George Kerby said:




On 3/13/14 5:50 PM, in article
2014031315504673476-savageduck1@REMOVESPAMmecom, "Savageduck"
wrote:

On 2014-03-13 22:32:57 +0000, newshound said:

On 13/03/2014 19:20, George Kerby wrote:
Nice article about Kodaks best B&W film...

http://moreintelligentlife.com/conte...rd/tri-x-facto
r?page=full


I preferred FP4. Kodachrome II every time for colour, though.


The last time I used Tri-X was back in 1971 when I still had a wet darkroom.


Stainless steel reels, or those plastic ones where you "worked" the roll on
from the outside to the center?


I don't know about real "plastic", I had two of my father's 1947-1950
vintage bakelite tanks which did a great job and were quite smooth
loaders. Then sometime around 1968 I got a stainless tank with the
notorious wire spiral holder which could be a royal PIA.

When I conquered the ss reels and loaded film without any crimps,
undeveloped area, or resulting 'half-moons', I thought I was king of the
world!


Yup!

--
Regards,

Savageduck


J. Clarke[_2_] March 14th 14 01:39 AM

Tri-X turns 60
 
In article ,
says...

On 3/13/14 5:50 PM, in article
2014031315504673476-savageduck1@REMOVESPAMmecom, "Savageduck"
wrote:

On 2014-03-13 22:32:57 +0000, newshound said:

On 13/03/2014 19:20, George Kerby wrote:
Nice article about Kodaks best B&W film...

http://moreintelligentlife.com/conte...rd/tri-x-facto
r?page=full


I preferred FP4. Kodachrome II every time for colour, though.


The last time I used Tri-X was back in 1971 when I still had a wet darkroom.


Stainless steel reels, or those plastic ones where you "worked" the roll on
from the outside to the center?

When I conquered the ss reels and loaded film without any crimps,
undeveloped area, or resulting 'half-moons', I thought I was king of the
world!


Now try doing that in the trunk to a Volvo sometime because it's the
only place to which you have access that is dark enough after your
changing bag blew away.

George Kerby March 14th 14 01:16 PM

Tri-X turns 60
 



On 3/13/14 11:33 PM, in article
, "RichA"
wrote:

On Thursday, March 13, 2014 3:20:05 PM UTC-4, George Kerby wrote:
Nice article about Kodaks best B&W film...



http://moreintelligentlife.com/conte...rd/tri-x-facto

r?page=full


Kodak's best was Tech Pan, it was beyond the capability of lenses. Tri-X was
grainy and only used by news photogs because they understood how it
functioned. HP-5 was better in the 1980's and currently, T-Max is much better
as is XP-2, a chromogenic B&W film. The best developer for conventional black
and white films, if you can still find it, is Agfa Refinal.


Nope, Microdol-X...


George Kerby March 14th 14 01:20 PM

Tri-X turns 60
 



On 3/13/14 11:50 PM, in article
, "RichA"
wrote:

On Thursday, March 13, 2014 3:20:05 PM UTC-4, George Kerby wrote:
Nice article about Kodaks best B&W film...



http://moreintelligentlife.com/conte...rd/tri-x-facto

r?page=full


The article itself was very good, the writer did their homework. Whenever
people write articles about technical subjects, if you are involved in those
subjects yourself, you can instantly spot the fact a writer might be
unfamiliar with that subject. Errors and use incorrect use of jargon are the
major giveaways. This one was good, thanks.


You're welcome...



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