Hi Ron
the labs I have here don't know "what an instruction is" ;-)
You can tell or write them what you want it doesn't matter...., I have given
up.
At least, development and first prints are very cheap and I scan the
negatives later.

I looks like I have to go with standard Fuji 1600 superia or Konica 800
Centurion
and convert them on the PC to b/w as the safest solution?

greetings
Markus


>>-----Original Message-----
>>From: Rob Studdert [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>>Sent: Wednesday, March 22, 2006 11:50 PM
>>To: [email protected]
>>Subject: Re: Which high speed film for indoor shots ? was:RE: How do you
>>select your camera for the day? was
>>
>>
>>On 22 Mar 2006 at 22:36, Markus Maurer wrote:
>>
>>> Hi Herb
>>> Welcome from my side first ;-)
>>> Could you post samples of unpushed ISO 3200 indoor shots with the Ilford
>>> 3200 film or other brands from ISO 800-3200 in available light?
>>> Unpushed, because I would have to send it to a "very standard" lab for
>>> developping.
>>
>>Both Ilford 3200 and Kodak T-Max (TMZ) is a push process to EI
>>3200, the actual
>>native speed of these films is ISO 1000, you'll note on the
>>packaging that the
>>speed is written as EI 3200 not ISO 3200, check out the following
>>documentation. These aren't films that I'd throw at a lab that doesn't
>>specifically know how to handle them or one that can't handle
>>instructions. You
>>should also really find out what developers they have available
>>too as you'll
>>see from the spec sheets.
>>
>>http://www.kodak.com/global/en/professional/support/techPubs/f32/f
32d.jhtml#9895
8

http://www.ilford.com/html/us_english/pdf/delta3200.pdf

Cheers,


Rob Studdert
HURSTVILLE AUSTRALIA
Tel +61-2-9554-4110
UTC(GMT)  +10 Hours
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://members.ozemail.com.au/~distudio/publications/
Pentax user since 1986, PDMLer since 1998

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