Hi, I'm posting for the first time on this thread after being pointed here on one of the Photo of the Week threads, where I happened to share a photo taken with the new Harman Phoenix. I've been experimenting with it, so I thought I'd come over here to share some of my results. All of the following photos were taken in and around Taipei with a Nikomat (Nikkormat) FTN camera and either a f/2 24mm or a f/1.4 50mm lens—and before anyone asks, I did check the camera’s light meter with an external meter and grey card, and it is a bit flaky due to age and possibly the battery voltage being higher than the now discontinued mercury batteries, but it’s never more than half a stop off.
First I shot roughly half a roll at box speed, on a hike as well as a few indoor shots with generous lighting and a tripod (but no flash), then I promptly cut the strip out and popped it into my developing tank in a changing bag, while leaving the rest of the roll in the same camera. Here are some of the more presentable results:
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In my opinion, this is a film that really does not like contrast: dynamic range seems to be quite compressed, and exposing for shadows results in very overblown highlights that I had a hard time salvaging during scanning and post-production—there's supposed to be a distinct wavy pattern on the wallpaper behind the giant teddies!
Next I tried metering it at 400 and pushing it one stop in development. Results are incredibly grainy even in daylight, unless I'm doing really long exposures (more than 1 sec.) and blowing everything out. Ironically, I think low-light photos turned out better:
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(Our local Ilford reseller was having a yearend sale, so of course the teddies had to stock up)
So, since this is a film that already doesn't like contrast and hates being pushed, I thought why not try doing a bleach bypass just for the heck of it. So for my second roll, I set my camera's meter to 400 to deliberately underexpose as per usual bleach bypass shooting, and tried to shoot low contrast settings. Frankly I think the results look better than normal processing:
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So, my thoughts:
1. This film doesn't like contrast.
2. This film doesn't like being pushed.
3. If developing at home, try a bleach bypass if possible, you might be surprised by the results.
4. Don't throw away your Kodak Gold just yet.
It took quite a while to assemble everything, and this is just my two cents, but I hope this helps!