A Journey into Darkness and Light – In Search of a “Go To” Black & White film stock

By Scott Ferguson

Since picking up film still cameras again in July, 2024 I’ve sampled a range of film stocks with wildly varying results, particularly in black & white.  My earliest forays were plagued by technical problems with the cameras I was using, which had been sitting in a basement unused for 25+ years.  Between my beginner’s enthusiasm to get out and shoot and slow lab turnaround where I was up in Canada, I ended up shooting a lot of film before I figured out I needed to service the cameras.  The Hasselblad shots that actually came out looked great, but there were many blank frames because the Zeiss lenses, while optically brilliant, were mechanically unreliable with their in-lens shutters that hadn’t been fired this millenium. The shutter and frame advance mechanics of the M2 were also inconsistent, with some shots coming out quite underexposed, along with some random partial double exposures. Sadly this impacted some very interesting ‘you had to be there’ shoots early on, such as a day when a couple of hundred Canadian Hell’s Angels showed up at Elbow Falls, and the once-a-year Tsuut’ina Pow Wow.

Police Photographers and Hell’s Angels at Elbow Falls, July, 2024, Leica M2, Leitz Summicron 50mm f2, Tri-X 
Young Tsuut’ina Man, 07/28/24, Leica M2, Leitz Summicron 50mm f2, Tri-X

After seeing the results of my first wave of shooting, I realized that something was wrong and I needed to get all of my gear serviced.  However, even after the CLA’s, my results were uneven at best.  I had to troubleshoot how to get better looking photos.  Most importantly, I had to learn to shoot better!

At first I assumed that Tri-X would be my reliable default b&w stock, based in part on my recollections of loving Tri-X 16mm reversal film when I was doing student films in the early 80’s.  I also have to confess, I love the name “Tri-X”, which has a bit of 1950’s Sci Fi or Cold War spy movie vibe, but my early results were quite a bit grainier than I anticipated, and I wasn’t getting the nice contrast and deep blacks I remembered from university.

Bow River, Banff, 8/17/24, Hasselblad 500 CM, Zeiss 60mm Distagon f3.5, Tri-X

With the cameras in good nick and knowing I had some of the best lenses ever made, it was time to look at other parts of the workflow.  The quest for getting better results on black & white have led me down many rabbit holes, including conversations about developer chemicals and tabular vs. non-tabular film — all well beyond where I was at that time (and still am) as a photographer.  But I wasn’t shy about trying out different film stocks, so I decided to do a bit of a ‘grand tour’ to see if I could find the top color and black & white stocks that fit my emerging aesthetic as a photographer.  Sorry I know that sounds pretentious — I was trying to figure out what kind of film I like.  It was kind of fun to order a bit of a “pu pu platter” of single rolls of 120 film to test run the different lines offered by Kodak & Ilford, and some less well known (to me, at least) brands like Cinestill, Phoenix, Rollei & Agfa and featuring terminology that I knew very little about, like “Ortho” or “RPX”.

I also picked up an old Pentax Spotmeter V and started to teach myself how to calculate exposure.  This shot is from a favorite ‘insiders’ vantage point of Canmore’s signature mountains that requires crossing the highway on foot, scrambling down a rocky culvert and then under a railroad bridge.  What makes that particular spot popular for photographers is the strategically placed reflecting pool that perfectly mirrors The Three Sisters.  I spent about 4 hours there one Sunday afternoon chatting with other hikers and photographers who happened by, watching the light pass over the mountains and shooting them in a ‘light study’ series like Monet’s Haystacks.  In practice, the light shifted pretty slowly during the mid afternoon, and then things started to move pretty quickly toward the end of the afternoon.  There was a bit of a ‘rush’ toward the part of the day where the last bits of sunlight were still hitting the granite peaks and four or five other photographers, clearly hip to the best timing for beautiful dramatic light, showed up for about 5-10 minutes to catch the peak moments.

The Three Sisters, 08/25/24, Hasselblad 500CM, Zeiss Planar 80mm f 2.8, Ilford Pan F Plus 50

This was one of my better black & white shots from that time of day, shot on Ilford Pan F Plus 50.  I really like the fine grain and deep blacks, but this shot feels a touch soft compared to some of my other shots that day.  It’s hard to miss focus on a granite mountain at infinity, so I think there may be a little motion blur (even from a tripod) perhaps caused by the Hasselblad ‘mirror slap’ while shooting a slow stock with a red filter.

My lab options were pretty limited in that part of Canada, so I migrated all of my film photos from the native Apple “Photos” program to Lightroom to fine tune the scans as best I could.  I spent a lot of time on the sliders on this shot taken on Delta 100, trying to find the sweet spot balancing the drama of the bright clouds against a dark sky while still preserving a bit of detail in the shadows of the large granite mountain face.

Mount Lawrence Grassi, 9/1/24, Hasselblad 500CM Zeiss Distagon 60mm f3.5, Delta 100 with a red filter

Looking beyond Tri-X for a 400 ISO b&w, I’ve done a fair amount of shooting with Ilford HP5, such as this one I grabbed of a model on the back of a NYC ferry boat.  She was posing for another photographer who was shooting with a Rolleiflex (which was kind of cool.)  That day I was trying out a recently acquired 1949 Leitz Summitar f2 and things got off to a faster start than I anticipated as this little scene unfolded in front of me just as the ferry got underway.   I kind of ‘hitchhiked’ along with their small professional shoot and managed to grab a couple of quick shots with my M3 during the 10 minutes it took to cross from Fulton Landing in Brooklyn to Pier 11/Wall Street.

Model on NYC Waterways Ferry, 3/10/25, Leica M3, Leitz Summitar f2, Ilford HP5

I’m happy that I’m getting better results on the fly than I was back in July at the Pow Wow or when the Hell’s Angels showed up unexpectedly, but I do sometimes find myself wishing for a 400 speed film that has a finer grain structure. On a side note, I’ve also found that I am almost always disappointed the first time I look at scans coming back from the lab.  Often, I’ve built up my expectations based on what I remember from looking through the viewfinder and what I imagined the shot was going to look like.   But after I start to get past my expectations and see whatever is really there on the negative,  I can even learn to like or love the things I wasn’t quite expecting — like a bit of grain, the wide range of tones on the model, from the deep black shadows on her dress to the slightly blown out highlights on her hair and face, and the energy of the boats crossing paths with the Manhattan bank of the East River beckoning in the background.

Every once in a great while, something comes back that exceeds even my idealized imagination of what the shot was going to look like.

Lake Louise, 12/15/24, Hasselblad 500CM, Zeiss Planar 80mm f2.8, Ilford XP2 with an orange filter.

When this roll of XP2 (a stop on my ‘grand tour’) came back from the lab, I was wow’ed by the fine grain and the dynamic range, from deep black to brightest white, all on a 400 ISO film.  That day on Lake Louise was magic — the light was beautiful all day and the sky and clouds added drama to the monumental landscape of the Canadian Rockies rising out of a frozen lake, where I was standing to take this shot.  I was shooting with an orange filter that day and the sky in the upper right hand corner is such a deep dark color it feels like a window into outer space.  XP2 was instantly a strong contender for a ‘go to’ black and white stock, but I still had a large batch of single rolls of different stock in the fridge, and I wanted to shoot them to see what I might discover along the way.

Johnston Canyon, 01/28/25, Hasselblad 500CM, Zeiss Distagon 60mm f3.5, Rollei RPX 25

This shot of the High Falls of Johnston Canyon frozen into cascading icicles was taken on one of my last outings in Canada.  I had come a long way from my early efforts of the summer, not the least of which was having the desire, energy and fitness to strap on some crampons and tote my full Hasselblad kit with a tripod up and down a 3 mile round trip of icy single track hiking path on uneven terrain.  Since I had the tripod and was doing a literally frozen landscape, I decided to try out the slowest stock I had,  Rollei RPX 25.  I thought the results on that day were great and this might be one of my best overall technical shots in black & white.  (I had also figured out that it was useful to retract the mirror and barn doors before tripping the shutter when shooting at such slow shutter speeds.)  I would happily shoot RPX 25 again for landscapes, but wouldn’t attempt running around NYC doing handheld ‘street’ shots on a film that slow.

Tesla Protest, Gowanus, Brooklyn, 3/8/25; Leica M3, Voigtlander Color Skopar 28mm f3.5, Tri X

Speaking of NYC street shooting, I was doing a medium format photo walk with a friend of mine taking shots on the semi-neglected industrial waterways of Brooklyn when we happened onto this anti-Elon Musk protest at a Brooklyn Tesla dealership.  I decided to grab my Leica instead of the Hasselblad for more of a quick-shooting documentary/photo journalist mode.  I was trying out a ‘new’ lens that Hamish had posted about — an early aughts Voigtlander 28mm f3.5 that seemed like a good option for zone-focusing in situations just like this.   For testing newly acquired gear, I’ve been ‘using up’ film I’ve had on hand for a while, and that day I happened to have some Tri-X loaded in the M3 for testing the Voigtlander on black and white.  After going through the usual anger, denial, bargaining, depression and acceptance phases that happen when I get a roll back from the lab, I have to say I’m feeling like I might have been a bit hasty to move past Tri-X and that the problems with the shots I was getting in my first weeks/months of shooting may have been due to other factors.  (I was also pretty happy with the the 28mm lens and zone focusing as a way to shoot in situations like this; the  Color Skopar, true to its name, is also a great lens for shooting in color.  Thanks for the tip, Hamish!)

Bow River, Banff, 01/29/25, Hasselblad Planar 80mm f2.8, Rollei RPX 100

Back to that very cold final weekend photo outing in Canada, I tried out a roll of Rollei RPX 100 (and a new lab in NYC) and was pretty happy with those results.  This shot has a very nice range from deep black to bright white, and I like the detail in the evergreens that often has gone full black for me on other stocks.  There is also a sense of perspective that I feel looking at the large rocks on top of the ice receding toward the far shoreline.   I am liking the Rollei RPX stocks quite a bit, and still have a roll of RPX 400 to try out that I’m very interested to see in action.

Red Hook Grain Terminal, 03/10/25, Hasselblad 500CM (645 format), Zeiss Planar 80mm f2.8, Cinestill XX

Now back in New York, the landscapes are different but my photographic adventures continue.  This shot was of the derelict Red Hook Grain Terminal, a big monolithic structure on the Brooklyn waterfront that has fascinated me for years as a small piece of New York that seems invulnerable to gentrification.  I was trying out a roll of Cinestill XX.   I like the contrasting landscapes of the Canadian Rockies versus the urban industrial landscape of Brooklyn in vaguely similar compositions with mid-ground boulders and soccer balls providing a sense of scale, perspective and depth. I think the XX performs well.

Even now after 7-8 months of learning curve, from time to time, I will get a ‘bad roll’ back from the lab where there is a problem that can be hard to diagnose, especially when it’s using the same equipment, lab and techniques that I use on everything else I shoot.

The East River from Brooklyn, Hasselblad 500CM, Zeiss Sonnnar 150mm, f4, Rollei Retro 80S

This roll of Rollei Retro 80S came back from the lab looking so retro that it felt like the negatives had been stored in some dusty desk drawer for 40 or 50 years and not cleaned prior to scanning.  I’m not sure where, when or what went wrong on that roll, as most everything else I’ve been shooting since I got back to NYC has been pretty consistent and acceptable, if not good.  I won’t judge the stock based on this one roll without trying to troubleshoot a bit, but I’m not sure when I’ll get around to shooting another roll of Rollei Retro 80.

Pre-school outing, DUMBO, Brooklyn, 03/25/25, Hasselblad 500CM, Zeiss Planar 80mm f2.8, Ilford Delta 100

This is from one of my most recent outings in Brooklyn, and there’s a quality to this shot on Delta 100 that feels kind of ‘classic’ like it could have been taken when I was the age of those kids, despite their dayglo traffic vests and modern cars lining the cobblestone street.  I immediately took to this photo, and a lot of the shots that I took that day on that roll of Delta 100 have a bit of that timeless quality.

The Statue of Liberty, 03/25/25, Hasselblad 500CM, Zeiss Sonnar 250mm f5.6, Ilford Delta 100

When I sat down to write this, I was thinking/hoping I would come out of this post with a firm idea on a black and white stock to use as a ‘when in doubt’ as Portra 400 has become my ‘go to’ color film stock.  I want to choose wisely, as I still have a fair amount of 35mm Pan F Plus 50 I bought in an early blush of enthusiasm thinking it would be perfect for those Canadian landscapes. I find I don’t load it much on the Leica because I often shoot a single roll over multiple days and locations, and a 50 ISO doesn’t lend itself to much beyond a nice bright sunny day exterior.  I like to be at the ready to grab the Leica and shoot something handheld without a lot of set up in case the Hell’s Angels or a fashion model show up unexpectedly.

I’d love to hear from the community about what stocks you like to shoot, and which shots of mine feel more or less strong, and if you have a main ‘go to’ stock, or if it’s more ‘horses for courses’.

The cover image for this post of ice crystals on Bow Lake north of Lake Louise, along the aptly named Icefields Parkway, was shot handheld, wide open on a bright sunny day using the Hasselblad 60mm Distagon f3.5 on Pan F Plus with an orange filter.

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About The Author

By Scott Ferguson
Scott Ferguson is an independent film and television producer known for such films as Brokeback Mountain, Only Lovers Left Alive and The People vs. Larry Flynt, and the television shows The Night Of and Succession. While working around cameras and recorded images for his entire career, shooting still photography with vintage all manual cameras is a new and very stimulating passion.
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Bill Watts on A Journey into Darkness and Light – In Search of a “Go To” Black & White film stock

Comment posted: 08/05/2025

Nice images. My go to black and white film is Ilford FP4 plus or Ilford Delta 100, self processed in 70 year old Johnson and Johnson Essex and Kent daylight loading developing tanks. I process FP4 plus in either HC-110 dilution b or Ilford Ilfotec DD-X 1+4, and delta 100 in Ilfotec DD-X 1+4. all at box times and temperatures. Grain is minimal and the tonal range is excellent.

I shoot both 35mm and medium format versions of these films in a number of Olympus, Zenza Bronica and Kiev 88 cameras. Exposure is taken care of by the camera where it has metering, and by a Gossen MasterSix light meter for cameras without metering. All my cameras are between 20 and 60 years old with minimal servicing. It is unusual to get a dud frame except when I do something stupid! Usually get 36/36, 12/12, 15/15 printable negatives on every film.
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Bill Watts replied:

Comment posted: 08/05/2025

Additional comments. Possible reasons for the graininess is that the film naturally is more grainy being ISO 400, I rarely use anything but ISO 100 or 200 at a pinch for that very reason. Shooting in poor light can also influence the visibility of the grain. It could have been overdeveloped (unlikely) or a non fine grain developer was used or the developer required replenishment or replacement. I have always processed my own black and white films using one shot developer. I have two Leicas as well, an M3 and a IIIf. Both have been consigned to the shelf as despite spending several hundred euros on having them serviced by Leica in Wetzlar, they continue to perform poorly bit like NTSC television, Never The Same Colour twice! Exposure varied a lot. I only keep them for sentimental value, they belonged to my Dad.

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Scott Ferguson replied:

Comment posted: 08/05/2025

Hey Bill, Thanks for the comments and I look forward to seeing more of your photography! I think the worst of the graininess in the first couple of images on TRi-X was probably due to underexposure, partially caused by an unreliable shutter on the Leica M2 that had been sitting unused for 25ish years. That was enough to turn me off Tri X for a long time until I ran and old roll through my M3, which I got to replace the M2 when I gave it back to my son. I was reasonably happy with the amount of grain on the photo of the anti-Tesla protestors, which was better exposed and also went through a different lab. All that being said, I am liking the 'slower' ISO films, including Delta 100 and Rollei RPX 100 and even Rollei RPX 25. I think those look beautiful. I'm continuing to sample lots of B&W stocks and am aiming for a sequel to this post at some point soon to look at those.

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Ibraar Hussain on A Journey into Darkness and Light – In Search of a “Go To” Black & White film stock

Comment posted: 08/05/2025

Thanks for the intriguing write up Scott.
Lovely compositions but it seems the films should be much finer with more detail and smoother contrast.
Out of curiosity which developer are you using please?
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Scott Ferguson replied:

Comment posted: 08/05/2025

Hi Ibraar, Thanks. Unfortunately, I haven't reached the point of doing my own processing so I've sent these films to a variety of labs. The first three very grainy images were processed at The Darkroom a US based mail order lab in California. I think they are the worst offenders in terms of grain, and I'm pretty sure the first two 35mm photos were underexposed by a couple of stops due to an unreliable shutter on a Leica M2 that had been sitting unused for 25ish years and needed to be serviced. Shots 4, 6 & 7 were processed by a friend through a home lab kit in Canada, and all of the rest were processed at Photolife, a storefront lab in Brooklyn which is the favorite for students, because the rates are quite reasonable. Other than shot 12, the Manhattan Bridge shot on Rollei Retro 80 S, which I think had some other technical problem, I am not unhappy with them and feel like my results are improving. But there is certainly always room for more improvement, so I'd be interested in tips from someone much more experienced like yourself and eventually I may 'graduate' to doing my own processing. Thanks!

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Ibraar Hussain replied:

Comment posted: 08/05/2025

Well I think there’s nothing wrong with your technique nor any of the films and cameras at all. The problem is with the Lab. their processing is not good. Buy an AP set of a tank reels and squeegee from Amazon - plus Bellini Duo Step (Diafine) easiest developer to use which you can store for years and then see your results shine as they deserve !

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Scott Ferguson replied:

Comment posted: 08/05/2025

Thanks Ibraar! That sounds like an interesting next step. Sorry to ask what may be an uninformed question, but I'm not finding "AP Tank" in Amazon -- is that a brand?? If I go down that road, do you have thoughts/recommendations on scanning? I'm interested in doing home scanning eventually, and might revisit some of my older negatives to see if I can improve on them, and talked to Hamish about some options for using a digital camera to scan, but probably standing by on bigger gear purchases/investment until my next gig starts. Thanks again...

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Steve Cope on A Journey into Darkness and Light – In Search of a “Go To” Black & White film stock

Comment posted: 08/05/2025

My favourite film is Kodak Double-X which I shoot at 250. I'm also a fan of Agfa APX 100 and Ilford FP4. I have hundreds of cameras and I shoot a wide variety of film. I do miss being able to get Agfa Vista 200 from Poundland though
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Scott Ferguson replied:

Comment posted: 08/05/2025

Cool, Thanks Steve! Am I right that Kodak Double X and Cinestill XX are more or less the same stock? I don't see Kodak XX readily available in 35mm or 120 packaging -- maybe on a larger roll for bulk rollings. Same with Agfa APX 100. I have tried FP4 and it will probably be in the next installment of my B&W survey. Happy shooting!

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Christopher Welch on A Journey into Darkness and Light – In Search of a “Go To” Black & White film stock

Comment posted: 08/05/2025

Thanks for sharing your film journey. It is interesting how we arrive at our "go-to" brands. When I started shooting film again, I shot Tmaxx 100 and loved the look of it, but I hated the price per roll plus lab processing. So I tried HP5+ next, and by the fourth roll, I hated it. Then I tried out Tri-X and started developing in D-76 and scanning myself, and I've arrived at my happy place. Tri-X and D-76 has the "look" I had been trying to achieve. But everyone's different and finds their "look" and it's been fun finding it. I love the process of film.
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Scott Ferguson replied:

Comment posted: 08/05/2025

Thanks Christopher! It has been a really interesting journey. I've gone through similar journeys from hate to love and back and forth. My early forays turned me off to Tri-X for a long time until I decided to run a roll to test out some equipment and liked the results I got because I had gotten better at shooting in the 5-6 months that I hadn't been using it. I thought I was close to landing on a 'go to' stock and was kind of between XP2 and Delta 100, but then as I started looking at all the different stocks I'd tried and also trying out new ones for these posts, I'm finding that I like the variety and different looks and 'personalities' of a lot of different stocks and it feels like I might be going with more of a 'horses for courses' approach than having a single favorite -- but we'll see where things take me!

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CHRISTOF RAMPITSCH on A Journey into Darkness and Light – In Search of a “Go To” Black & White film stock

Comment posted: 08/05/2025

My go-to for MF is definitely Ilford Delta 400 paired with DD-X developer. For 35 mm I tend to use HP5 plus, also with DD-X. For sheets, it's Fomapan 400 usually paired with either DD-X, Rodinal, or D-23, since with sheets you have the luxury of fine tuning the developer-film pairing.
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Scott Ferguson replied:

Comment posted: 08/05/2025

Thanks Christof! I have some Delta 400 that I've tried since this post and I think its a good stock. And I have a roll of Fomapan 400 that is about to to go the lab -- I look forward to seeing the results. I also like HP5. Some day I may move into doing my own processing, so thanks for the tips on your favored developer. Best, s

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