Reasonably sure Richard Tuohy uses 3383 quite a bit. I've been wanting to pick 
some up ever since taking one of his workshops a few years ago. The low iso 
gives it a fair amount of flexibility for bi-packing and related fun things.

On January 23, 2017 3:21:08 PM AST, Ryder White <ryder.wh...@gmail.com> wrote:
>Hey Dan,
>
>I've shot and processed a few rolls of the Agfa aviphot and like Pip
>says
>hand processing in E6 is very doable. I found it to be a pretty
>tolerant
>stock for that, but then again my QC is not very exacting so take that
>with
>a grain of salt.
>
>I know of a few people who have used 3383 as a camera stock, myself
>included, and it is worth experimenting with since it's so
>(comparatively)
>cheap. Rate it around 6 asa and treat it more like a tungsten stock. If
>you
>get outside in the bright sun with a fast lens you might be able to
>shoot
>it at something close to 24fps. It's also possible to cross process it
>to a
>positive in E6. Getting a standard, well-balanced image is not
>something
>I've been able to do with 3383 (could also be my processing, as
>mentioned
>before) but it's very well-suited to abstraction...
>
>Cheers,
>
>R
>
>On Mon, Jan 23, 2017 at 10:00 AM, Scott Dorsey <klu...@panix.com>
>wrote:
>
>> I think the Wittner and Agfa films are the same film off of one big
>jumbo
>> that was released a couple years back.  When it is gone it is likely
>gone.
>>
>> 3383 is very slow but if you can stand one or two seconds per frame
>it
>> could be interesting.
>> --scott
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