Ilford Pan F Plus - 120 Film


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Sale price£7.75
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Customer Reviews

Based on 61 reviews
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S
Santino M. (Windlesham, GB)
Perfect for: Great All-Rounder
Accreditation Handles: Joogble_analogue
One of my favorites

I love the contrast in this film and its reliability. I also really like the fine grain within the film as it helps to create really great looking photos.

M
Matthew D. (Waltham Forest, GB)
Perfect for: Great All-Rounder, Beginners, Portraits, Landscapes, Pinhole/Long-Exposure, Architecture, Travel, Studio work
A vintage feel

Pan F is among my favourite low speed films, especially when put behind some good quality glass!

M
Matthew D. (Woolwich, GB)
Perfect for: Great All-Rounder, Beginners, Portraits, Landscapes, Pinhole/Long-Exposure, Architecture, Creative/Abstract, Travel, Studio work
Makes medium format look like large format

Pan F (as well as certain other films) is fine grained and "sharp" enough that a 35mm negative can print almost as clearly as a medium format negative, and a medium format one can print with almost the same amount of clarity as a large one.

M
Matthew D. (Barking, GB)
Perfect for: Great All-Rounder, Beginners, Portraits, Landscapes, Pinhole/Long-Exposure, Architecture, Travel
Fine grain and excellent tonality

A wonderful film for wide apertures or sunny days. Portraits are very pleasing and landscapes benefit from the overall feel of this film.

A
Andy T. (Weymouth, GB)
Perfect for: Portraits, Landscapes, Pinhole/Long-Exposure, Architecture
Accreditation Handles: https://andysphotoblog.org/
PAN-F 120 Fine Grain Wonder!

Pan-F is a "fussy" film to use. It likes accurate exposure, but we should all be doing that anyway right :) ! It also likes to be developed promptly, and looses some of the latent image if you don't. Small percentages, but sometimes noticeable, unlike say FP4. It also doesn't keep too well, and unlike just about all other B/W films, a roll 5 years out of date may well not be OK! I think I've just about got the hang of it now. It's slow of course, so anything than the brightest day, you'll need a tripod. The effort is well worth the work though, it's a beautiful fine grain film, that oozes quality and perfect for landscapes.

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