rockdog wrote:
Thank you waegwan, back in those days, I bought Kodak Tri-X in 100 ft rolls, and developed it by often pushing a full stop or more. I sort of embraced the grain. The pleasant surprise is how much fun it is to work with these as digigal files. I appreciate you taking the time to comment.
Phil
Interesting, in those days I was shooting mostly 120 in TLRs. I too enjoy grain and high contrast. I shot a lot of Pan-X 100 because it was all I could get in 120 but every once in a while I'd get a roll of Tri-X 400. I developed my own film and made my own prints but it was community dark room so I had no control over the temp or age of the chemicals. It was always a little tricky to see what I'd get. Fortunately I enjoyed the time at the enlarger doing test strips, tilting, dodging and burning. I have just recently gotten a film scanner and started in that. :-)