You can't go wrong with Tri-X. but then again I like the grain.

Glen Tortorella wrote:
> Thanks, Scott.  I have some Fuji Neopan Acros 100 on hand.  What do  
> you recommend in traditional B&W 400?
>
> Glen
>
> On Oct 3, 2007, at 12:26 PM, Scott Loveless wrote:
>
>   
>> Glen Tortorella wrote:
>>     
>>> I forgot to ask: is all C-41 processing the same?  I ask because on
>>> my C-41 B&W I had processed at Wal-Mart, some of the whites have a
>>> bit of a purplish tone.  My instinct tells me that this is a result
>>> of inadequate light in these particular photos...or is C-41 for B&W
>>> at Wal-Mart just a bad idea?
>>>
>>> Thanks,
>>> Glen
>>>
>>>       
>> They print those on the same color paper they print everything else  
>> on.
>>   A green, yellow or purple tint is common.  Good luck finding a  
>> printer
>> these days who can work around that.
>>
>> I used to bring my C-41 black and white to a Target store in the St.
>> Louis area.  The girl behind the counter actually knew what she was
>> doing and would set my film aside until she had an opportunity to
>> calibrate something on their mini-lab.  The prints I got there were  
>> the
>> best I've seen from C-41 B&W.  Even the local "pro labs" didn't do as
>> well, and they charged a lot more money.  When she quit I stopped  
>> using
>> the stuff and went to traditional B&W film.
>>
>> -- 
>> Scott Loveless
>> http://www.twosixteen.com/fivetoedsloth/
>>
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