Hillsilly said:Looks like a cool camera. Hope you have some fun putting a few rolls through.CanonFanBoy said:Here was my question: "Now, can anyone recommend a good 35mm black and white film I can get from Adorama or somewhere? I just got a 56 year old Voigtlander Vito CL (mint condition) that I want to play around with. Also, I need a good recommendation for where to process. Got rid of all my amateur darkroom stuff 20 years ago."
For 35mm B&W film, for getting started, I'd stick with either Kodak or Ilford and just choose a film based on ISO. A lower ISO will have less grain and a higher ISO more grain. For general purposes, you can't really go wrong with tri-x 400 or TMAX 100 or 400. TMAX has been around for a while, but it is one of the newer B&W films.
I assume you live in the states? I really don't know the best places to recommend for developing over there. But for what its worth, I usually shoot colour film and later convert it to B&W in post if I want to. When choosing a place to develop your film, make sure they offer a high quality scanning service.
When I do shoot B&W, I go with Foma films (because I can get them at an affordable price from blanconegro.com.au). If you want to try colour film, you can't go wrong with Ektar (if ISO 100 is your thing) or Portra 400 (if you want a bit more speed). Ektar has a more saturated, contrasty look - great for landscapes, sunsets etc. Portra is for making people look beautiful.
Thank you Hillsilly. By looking at some of the film presets I have in lightroom I get the impression that some of that look is supposed to look like the print aged or that expired film was run through a camera. Is this correct? I seem to have read somewhere that some folks seek out old expired film to shoot with. Thanks for the advice!
The Voigtlander Vito CL does not have the ability to interchange lenses. I'm still working through the color roll I bought at Walmart. I actually have to guess at the distance to subject too, so this id going to be fun to see the results once developed.
One thing that does intrigue me are the old Soviet cameras I see on ebay with the Jupiter 9 lenses. It seems old film cameras go for next to nothing. I just watched a "minty" Canon A700 with four lenses go for $49.
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