Kodak Professional TRI-X 400/400TX 35mm Black-and-White Film, 36-Exposure Roll
Details
- Availability:
- Usually ships in 1-2 business days
- List Price:
- $3.52
- Our Price:
- $4.20
- Savings:
- -19%
- Average Customer Rating:
- 4.0 out of 5
- Manufacturer:
- Kodak
Ready to Buy?
- List Price:
- $3.52
- Our Price:
- $4.20
Features
- Single roll of TRI-X 400 professional black-and-white, 35mm film
- Excellent choice for dimly-lit or fast-action subjects
- Perfect for shots requiring a good depth of field, fast shutter speeds, or extending the distance range for flash pictures
- Delivers fine grain, wide exposure latitude, high sharpness, and high resolving power
Description
Sebastio Salgado has long relied on Kodak Professional TRI-X Film to express the human condition as he sees it. This classic black-and-white film allows for maximum pushability when he needs it, while its wide exposure latitude lets him leverage even the most challenging lighting situations. And the distinctive grain structure adds a level of realism as dramatic and profound as each subject.
The Kodak Professional TRI-X 400/400TX Black-and-White Film is a high-speed panchromatic film that is a good choice for photographing dimly lit subjects or fast action. It is also an excellent choice for photographing subjects that require good depth of field and fast shutter speeds, as well as for extending the distance range for flash pictures. This roll of TRI-X 400 film (400TX) is a 35-millimeter roll and is recommended for push-processing applications. TRI-X 400 black-and-white film delivers fine grain that is good for producing high-quality images; wide exposure latitude for rich tonality maintained with overexposure and underexposure; high sharpness that is good for applications that require a moderate degree of enlargement; and a high resolving power for a good rendition of detail. All of these features makes the TRI-X 400 film an excellent choice for professional black-and-white photographers.
Spotlight customer reviews
Shot Tri-X 400 for two semesters
[ Posted: 2007-02-10 ]
I bought a brick of this several years ago for a couple of black-and-white photography classes and was pretty pleased with it. Tri-X requires less development time than TMax, so there's less waiting around until you can get back to the fun stuff in the darkroom. It is a little grainy because of the film speed, but in this case the grain gave the finished photos a very pleasing quality that I wouldn't have had if I'd shot with some slower film.