wschwetz
Hello,
I accidentally exposed a Classic Pan 400 at 160 ASA. I can’t remember if it was bright sunshine or cloudy at the time. Does anyone have any suggestions for a contrast of 0.7? I have D76 and APH09 at a ratio of 1:40.
Tandemfahren
Just pretend you haven’t… noticed anything. Yes, seriously.
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Without having seen the film myself, I’d bet that its true speed is around 250± a third. So your actual overexposure is hardly worth mentioning.
If you’ve used integral or any other automatic metering, you’re usually still a bit on the low side anyway.
A 400 film can handle that with ease.
Enjoy the photos,
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Frank
PeterVolkmar
Hi,
If I remember correctly, the Classic is only 200 ISO, so what Frank says is definitely true.
The Classic has a very pronounced grain, to put it mildly (albeit a lovely one, and it really does have excellent grey-scale reproduction; I used to like using it on 4x5 when I wanted grain even with GF), so I’d recommend the D67. Unfortunately, I don’t have any exposure times for it.
Regards, Peter
Urnes
Yeah, just develop it. I always give it an exposure of 200 ISO. At 400, it’s just too light.
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Regards, Sven.
wschwetz
I’ve finally found the time and developed the film normally using D76. It worked well; the contrast is good. Thanks for the tip.
?
Has anyone developed Classic Pan 200 at ISO 160 using Promicrol and can offer any advice?