Hi Herb I would like to see some people shots and portraits you made with the Ilford 3200 since it seems to be the way to go for me at the moment. I would use the film at its default DX setting. I have not found such a thing as "A good photolab that will also do a test development" yet and would just let it develop at the "junk food labs" and order the cheapest first prints and later scan the negatives.
My emailadress is [EMAIL PROTECTED] Thanks a lot, that is very interesting stuff for me ;-) >>-----Original Message----- >>From: herb greenslade [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] >>Sent: Wednesday, March 22, 2006 11:10 PM >>To: Pentax User's group >>Subject: Which high speed film for indoor shots ? was:RE: How do you >>selectyour camera for the day? >> >> >>Hi Markus >> >>I have a series of images that I took, the equivalent of 800 ISO >>- 12800 ISO with the Ilford 3200 film. I had the film developed at a >>local photo lab with no adjustments. I don't mind sending them to >>you if you e-mail me. The images were scanned at 72 dpi approx. >>800x600 and are approx 180 K each. This might give you an idea >>of the quality. I think all would be acceptable or better with >>adjustments in PhotoShop or an equivalent photo editor - even >>printed the old fashioned way. >> >>They were taken in subdued daylight using a spot meter. >> >>A good photolab will also do a test development using the 1st >>several frames of film and develop accordingly if asked. My 1st club >>experience I was out about 4 stops, and that's how I found out & >>fortunately saved a couple of films. >> >>Unfortunately, I'm a bit of a dunce and haven't really had the >>interest in finding or designing a site to showcase my images but would >>gladly send you a sample of the more extreme stuff in proof form. >> >>herb >> >> >>

