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REVIEWS:  Film:  Black and White Film:
Pan-F Plus ISO 50
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Ilford Pan-F Plus ISO 50

MSRP: $

Description: An extremely fine grain black and white film. It has outstanding resolution, sharpness, and edge contrast.
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$5.50

 
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Rating
Reviewed by: 

Michael J Hoffman

( Expert)

Review Date
September 12, 2004

Overall Rating
 3 of 5

Value Rating
 5 of 5

Used product for
Less than 1 month

Visitors rate this review
3.50 of 5,
2 votes

Rate this review?

Review 1 of 30

Price Paid:  $3.00 from B&H

Summary:
I can see how this film would be useful for certain types of photography, but I do not like it for street photography. The film is too contrasty my needs. I wanted to try a slow film for a shallow DOF. I developed the film according to Ilford website specs but still got very high contrast negatives. In a studio with completely controlled lighting, I imagine this film could be a very useful addition to one's photographic arsenal. The film is very sharp with imperceptible grain.

Strengths:
Extremely Sharp Extremely Fine Grain Good In-Studio Film

Weaknesses:
Very High Contrast Not Suited for General/Street Photography

Similar Products Used:
I generally use Kodak Tri-X at EI 200 developed in TMax 1:4 at 68F for 5 minutes. This combination yields beautiful negatives and pleasing contrast. I'll stick with what works for me.

Customer Service:
N/A.



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Rating
Reviewed by: 

jfeinman

( Intermediate)

Review Date
March 25, 2004

Overall Rating
 5 of 5

Value Rating
 4 of 5

Used product for
1 to 3 months

Visitors rate this review
2.33 of 5,
3 votes

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Review 2 of 30

Price Paid:  $4.00 from looking glass in ber

Summary:
I'm constantly experimenting with different films, asking others about what has worked for them, etc. I've always been an Ilford user. I find that they have much better quality control in their films. I've used nearly every Ilford Film, except for FP4. I usually hate film grain, and I need the finest tonal variations for my shots. I was using HP5, because of its ease of development, price, and its not a finicky film, so you can tweak the devo times pretty easily. PanF 50 has been my favorite film by far. While it is slow, it definately takes some skill to use, since you have to have a rather steady hand, and a good understanding of how film reacts in lower light. I mainly shoot architecture, and I use a Nikon N80 with a Sigma 12-24mm wide angle zoom, so I can get good depth of field while shooting hand held with this film (I can shoot down to 1/10th of a second without getting camera shake).

Strengths:
For one, its panchromatic, so it much more tonally balanced than other conventional films. I've found that films such as HP5, and all 3 Deltas and T-Maxs(100,400,3200), have problems when rendering red light. They always seem to render it as a middleish gray. For those who are wondering, yes, you can blow it up to 16x20 and get less grain than most films at 8x10. Even when using a 5 filter (170 magenta), I had absolutely no complaints. The 16x20s produced off of 35mm negs rival the sharpness and grain of those produced off of larger formats (even 4x5).

Weaknesses:
The recpirocity failure is much more noticeable, and it is definalely not the most versatile film out there. It takes a few rolls to really get used to it, and I wouldn't recomend it for use in a point and shoot camera, or for those who like to buy Canon Rebels, leave them permenantly on program mode, and don't know much about shutter speeds and aperature settings.

Similar Products Used:
Ilford Pan 100, Delta 100, Kodak Plus X-Pan 125.

Customer Service:
whats the point, its film.



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Rating
Reviewed by: Killerbee
 (Intermediate)

Review Date
August 25, 2003

Overall Rating
 5 of 5

Value Rating
 5 of 5

Used product for
More than 1 year

Visitors rate this review
3.00 of 5,
2 votes

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Review 3 of 30

Price Paid:  $0.00

Summary:
Now that Agfa Pan 25 is starting to get hard to find I needed to look for an alternative. The store normally use over stocked and gave me a deal on a brick and I am impressed with this film. It is very fined grained, so much so it rivals the newer T grained films like Delta and Acros but since this is still an old fashioned film it has Very good tonality. Nothing much else to say about it, other than it does push sorta ok but then all the wonderful small grains get lumpy. It develops well, rather thick tough base and easy to print, I have made a grain less print from FP4+ to 16x20" but I can't do larger myself to see how well this will enlarge but I'm sure it will do better. Ilford films are cheap, yet rather good and among the best B&W out there.

Strengths:
Fine grained, wonderful tonality, easy to process, reasonably sharp.

Weaknesses:
other than I wish this was a 100 iso film, or that it could push to 400 iso without more grain the HP5+ nothing wrong with it.

Similar Products Used:
FP4+, Delta 100, acros, agfa pan 25

Customer Service:
not needed



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Rating
Reviewed by: Dominic_89
 (Intermediate)

Review Date
July 26, 2003

Overall Rating
 5 of 5

Value Rating
 5 of 5

Used product for
Less than 1 month

Visitors rate this review
3.00 of 5,
2 votes

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Review 4 of 30

Price Paid:  $5.00 from A Calgary camera sho

Summary:
A wonderful fine-grain, sharp, good contrast film that alows 8x10 and 11x14 prints to be made with almost no grain. Discovered it just a month ago while browsing through a little camera shop in Calgary. What a discovery! I was shooting floral close-ups at the time and the print quality that film gave was exceptional. Excellent value for the money, I would recommend it to anyone.

Strengths:
Good contrast No grain Sharp Image Quality Good value for the money The best film I've ever tried

Weaknesses:
Slower film, best used outdoors

Similar Products Used:
Ilford Delta, FP4, HP5, XP2- Kodak Tri-X, TMax Fuji Velvia

Customer Service:
for film???



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Rating
Reviewed by: johndc
 (Casual)

Review Date
April 12, 2003

Overall Rating
 5 of 5

Value Rating
 5 of 5

Used product for
Less than 1 month

Visitors rate this review
3.75 of 5,
4 votes

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Review 5 of 30

Price Paid:  $2.00 from B&H by mail

Summary:
Oh My God.

Strengths:
You can make 11x14 enlargements with this stuff and it still prints crisp and clear with little graininess and good resolution.

Weaknesses:
It's kinda slow. Not for indoor photography. Very intolerant of even slight (1/3 stop) over-exposure, in my experience.

Similar Products Used:
n/a

Customer Service:
It's film.



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