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Kodak 8667073 Tri-X 400 135/36 Negative Film - Black/White

£9.9£99Clearance
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Key to its longevity has been its flexibility - photographers can take TriX 120 into a variety of lighting situations and recover highlights and shadows or generate different grain feel through processing choices. My wife and I also drove on part of the famous Route 66, fabled in folklore, songs, and the motoring culture of mid-century USA. Tri-X looks just right for this type of topic. I need to return with my 4×5″ camera. Throughout it’s 80-odd years on the planet, Tri-X has found sustained demand from professionals, and, despite the advent and prevalence of digital photography (and, I suspect, lent a hand by the recent popularity of all things retro), it has gained a second life with amateurs. Photographers of a certain age may remember how vast the Kodak (aka: Great Yellow Father) product line was. Just look at a industrial or dealer Kodak catalog from the late 60’s. There was literally no photographic situation that you could encounter where Kodak didn’t have a product or service to help you. My favorite was the line of products for working in tropical areas where rot & fungus would ruin your film. They had that covered.

Tone and contrast is very good and grain just enough to give the images the character that I look for in an analogue image. This experiment has certainly encouraged me to use this film again as long as it isn’t priced a lot different to its’ competitors. Book whole month, partially-priced QPs and custom QP averaging transactions up to three years forward A direct link to our trusted and recommended online resource, supporting practitioners to understand the Act and implement the principles effectively into practice.

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A suite of safeguarding practice guidance to support practitioners in a range of safeguarding situations. Trade in eight languages: English, Japanese, Standard Chinese, German, Italian, Spanish, Russian and Turkish Working across tri.x, the Content Review & Development Board members work tirelessly behind the scenes to;

With help from the family, I bought my first camera in 1964, a Kodak Instamatic 500. It had a 38mm Schneider Xenar lens and a Gossen selenium light meter. I did not know what I was doing but had fun taking snapshots. Family snapshot, somewhere in Athens, Greece (Kodak Instamatic 500 camera, Schneider Xenar lens) The 1970sReflects procedures, policies and guidance which deal with day to day practicalities foster carers face Eastman Kodak introduced Tri-X film in 1940 in sheet film formats. Kodak introduced 35mm and 120 versions in 1954, and, in subsequent decades, also sold 220, 126, 127, 16mm, Super-8, and possibly other formats. Kodak modified the film several times over its life. According to Wikipedia, “In 2007, Tri-X was extensively re-engineered, receiving the new designation 400TX in place of TX or TX400, and became finer-grained.” I have read that the new emulsion has some of the characteristics of T-grain films, although I cannot verify this, but that might account for the finer grain while maintaining the 400 film speed. So, being now more into medium format photography I was very pleased to see that Analogue Wonderland have been having a very good promotion on 120 size Kodak Tri-X 400 in boxes of 5 rolls.

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