NO! :)
If you are serious about the B&W shoot some fall 'shades' & textures with it.
Experiment with
filtration. I am sue you will get some good results.
I have never tried the T-Max, but its sounds from your description like one
would want to treat it
more like a slide film that a conventional B&W. In otherwords expose for the
highlights NOT the
shadows. How does the shadow detail hold up when underexposed?
Jim Couch
Ken N wrote:
SHIP
> I have had a love/hate relationship with TMAX 100. My biggest
> problem has ALWAYS been burning out the highlights.
> Over-exposing this film is NOT a good thing. Nowhere near the
> forgiveness of Plus-X, Pan-F or Tri-X.
SNIP
> Just like it is important to take a farm field out of production
> once in a while, it is important to radically change directions
> and put the Velvia away. I need to relearn some things and
> improve my compositions. This "forced" change will be good for
> me. But can I wait until AFTER the fall colors?
>
> KN
< This message was delivered via the Olympus Mailing List >
< For questions, mailto:owner-olympus@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx >
< Web Page: http://Zuiko.sls.bc.ca/swright/olympuslist.html >
|