All good things come to those who wait (or so they reckon?). Having changed my mind last post and programmed an Ultramax 400 recipe instead of Tri-X, I thought tonight I would rectify the situation. So I did.
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| Cobden Lagoon. X100. f5.6 @ 1/1000th, ISO 400. Tri-X recipe with grain added in Color Efex Pro 4 |
For my Kodak Tri-X recipe I was going for contrasty and gritty. Well I certainly achieved that, and then some.... I actually think that the blacks have blocked in too much, so I may actually drop them back just a tad. Otherwise yeah - mission accomplished.
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| Cabbage Trees. X100 Tri-X recipe |
The final results were what I was after from the recipe (but I'll change to Med Hard Shadows if I shoot with it again). I don't hate the results, but I also don't 'love' them, and will continue to use my Acros simulation for my black and white jpegs going forward.
What I am liking is adding the grain in Color Efex Pro 4. I have a couple of custom profiles set up so it's super simple to import a jpeg, add medium or hard grain to an image, and export it out.
Previously I also mentioned that I haven't forgotten my Lumix S5, and that I will also be taking this with me when I go on holiday. I watched a video on Youtube recently that compared all the recent major camera manufacturers standard mono outputs, one of which was Lumix (of course). Out of all the camera manufacturers, Lumix have the most mono profiles (4 in all), and the standard 'mono' setting produces beautiful black and white images without any 'tweaking'. It was very comparable to Leica's mono setting - not surprisingly - since Panasonic and Leica work together on camera technology. In fact, the other 4 mono settings on the Lumix all reference Leica profiles.
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| Flax. Fujifilm X100. f5.6 @ 1/640th, ISO 200. Tri-X recipe + grain |
The recipe certainly creates moody black and white images, if that's what you are going for. It reminds me quite a bit of the 'grainy b&w' art filter on the Olympus cameras. Although the Olympus look was even more contrasty and grainy. It was my favorite art filter on the Olympus Pen EP-3 when I used that camera - but I did not use to the art filters very often.
With a lot of light on your subject, the Tri-X recipe gives a reasonably nice tonality - as can be seen above in the Flax image. I recall liking the Tri-X recipe I had on my Fujifilm X-E2 a little more than this one, so as discussed a little more 'fiddling' might be needed if I was going to persevere with this on my X100.
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| Gated Community. X100. f5.6 @ 1/640th, ISO 200. Tri-X recipe + grain added |
In the end though, I don't think I'll bother. As mentioned in a previous post, the X100 only has 3 custom slots for film recipe's, and my C2 is already taken up with Acros. So for the C3 slot, I think that I will play around with some more colour recipes. And I still do really like the look of my Agfa Optima recipe here. Two very different colour recipe's, and one mono, should give me enough options when out shooting.
And finally, the image above - Gated Community - was my last, and favorite, of the evenings shoot. I've been watching a lot of James Popsys on Youtube recently and I think his shooting style is beginning to rub off on me. I wasn't a big fan of his images initially, but the more I've watched him, the more I've started to relate to his vision. I'd like to think that James would approve of the photo, although he would want it in colour. I may do a colour version as well. We'll see.




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Thanks for your reply. I really appreciate you taking the time to comment on this post. I will get back to you as soon as I can.
Thanks again
Wayne