Me too! Well, all the way from Germany, Santa made a generous delivery of Ektar 120 roll film! I must have been very good this year!
Jurgen reminded me today that I had not mentioned B&W film. Like him, I love Fuji Across 100. It is simply a superb film with an excellent tonal range from rich blacks to bright whites and a long range in between.
I learnt when shooting it on my Hasselblad gear in the outback in about 2003, that if you nail the exposure Acros 100 will reward you in spades!
My lab called to say the first batch of negs had the best exposure and tonal range they'd seen. All this despite the fact the shots were of dead trees!!
I also really like Neopan 400 for much the same reasons.
Then of course there are the Ilford family Ilford of B&W.
Funnily enough my favourite B&W film is the XP2 Super - C41 process B&W. Unlike its Kodak competitor the negs come out monochrome, while the Kodak film produces quite orange negs like colour film. I'm not sure what this means, but it does explain this - my lab says that only Ilford XP2 produces real B&W tonality without any sign of colour fringing. They print just like genuine B&W negs!
The brilliant characteristic of XP2 is that you can shoot it at any ISO from 100 to 1600 - even mid-roll changes have no adverse effect on exposures. The latitude is so great the film does NOT need any pushing - just set your ISO where you want it and shoot.
If you need speed or want grain just wind up the ISO!
The "nominal" ISO of XP2 is 400ISO. I find the nicest exposures are made at 250ISO.
It is quite a contrasty film in full or flash light (and not in a negative way), so I like the lower grain at 250ISO.
Yes, of course I like the other Ilford B&W emulsions, but Acros, Neopan and XP2 are my favourites.
Again buy a few and take them for a test drive!
