Wayne;
Tech Pan is a wonderful and flexible film. Check the lit which came
with it (or check the Kodak site). Many different ASAs, developers,
development times, density ranges are listed. If I remember, shoot at
ASA and develop in technidol for "pictorial applications" I usually
shoot it at ASA 100 and develop in D76 for med to high density. It is
fantastic for a scene which is **very** low in contrast (I mean < 2
stops range). This film will pop the density range way out. As always,
experiment a bit.
George
Wayne Harrison wrote:
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Glen Lowry <lowry@xxxxxx>
> To: olympus@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx <olympus@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> Date: Saturday, September 18, 1999 3:21 AM
> Subject: Re: [OM] Tri-X + Rodinal
> To my mind there's not enough b&w talk around here--my zuikos
> >love monochrome.
> >Glen
> >
> now that you mention it...i just got a roll of kodak tech pan, having
> been fascinated by some of the prints i have seen utilizing that emulsion.
> any ideas on iso, development, printing, etc?
>
> a. wayne harrison
>
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