Lead by spunky frontgirl Ashley Miles, Vinyl Rhino is my favorite cover band in Frederick, Maryland. For years, they’ve rocked our bars with high energy hits from the 80’s to what’s current. Saturday night they stopped by Champions and blew the roof off the place. I was there to capture it on the newly re-released Kodak TMAX P3200.
Concerts are a perfect subject for the new Kodak TMAX P3200. The film allows you to stop down in dim light and get the most performance from your lens, which is important when your grain is as big and chunky as is par for the course with 3200 ISO films. I left my shutter at 125 most of the show and racked between about f2.8 and 5.6 as the stage lights blinked and flashed.
I rated the new P3200 at box speed, 3200 ISO. And as is customary with print film, I overexposed by half a stop to get more detail in the shadows which can fall away quickly in hard stage lighting.
As usual, Vinyl Rhino put on an amazing show. The band looked and sounded like they were truly having a blast too, which always makes the music that much sweeter.
Singer Ashley and bassist Nick were very animated, making them very challenging to photograph with an all manual film camera. When shooting concerts on film you just have to be confident that you got the last shot and concentrate on getting everything right on the next one, else you’ll be moving too slowly to catch the right moments. Sometimes you know you got a stray arm covering a face, or an “in between expression,” but you just have to throw it away in your mind and wind that advance lever.
I think my favorite piece from their set was their signature fusion of Whitney Houston’s I Wanna Dance With Somebody and Cyndi Lauper’s Girls Just Wanna Have Fun. The Wanna Dance side got the crowd jumping while lyrics were mainly handled by Nick as he hopped around with his Fender bass. Then Ashley started in with a rockier version of the Lauper classic. Her vocals felt like a rebel yell which the ladies in the audience immediately keyed into with strained singalongs and glimmering ringed hands in the air.
I started out with my Leitz 50/1.5 Summarit but never took it to full aperture where it softens considerably. Despite being designed in the 1940’s, it has a stunning clarity when stopped down. When shooting with grainy film, using a very sharp lens can help offset that muddiness that can occur when soft glass and the big T-Grain clusters collide. The out of focus areas become something of an emotional affair!
Then I got tight with my Leitz 90/2 Pre-Asph Summicron. This Canadian-built predecessor to the current 90 Cron was the first compact Leica 90 Summicron and the optics are just incredible, 5 elements in 4 groups. But what’s neat about this otherwise very modern lens is that the front element is only single coated. So while it can be clinically sharp, even with the built-in hood extended, you can still get some flare character. Particularly with harsh stage light. A little bit of flaring, I think, looks nice on a grainy emulsion. It sort of highlights the depth and physicality of the film.
When it came time to process, I used my go-to developer Kodak HC110, Dilution B. Kodak kindly furnished me with a new datasheet but it appears to be identical to the old P3200. 10 minutes at 68 degrees Fahrenheit for 3200 or 12 minutes for 6400. Though I shot at box speed, I decided to process for 6400 as I recall processing a stop faster than the film was rated gave images a richer contrast. TMAX P3200 is very tonal by nature, hence its very wide dynamic range. Tonality is great but I like some contrast in most of my work.
Between the excellent lighting, half stop over-exposure and push processing, I think that contrast was nearly spot-on what I was looking for. I adjusted levels slightly in Photoshop, usually only pulling the blacks in and dodging and burning where appropriate.
P3200’s T-Grain is not as fine as Ilford’s Delta 3200 grain but that’s one of the things I love about this film. It makes no apologies for itself. It’s immediately recognizable, even to a non-photographer, as film. The clumps of silver are unmistakable. The depth, the soul. They’re present in liberal amounts.
I usually call it quits at 6400 but what’s crazy is that P3200 can be rated from something like 800 to 25,000 EI. Experimental shooters have even gotten wider ranges. What that means is that, if you like, P3200 could be the ONLY film in your bag, capable of shooting in sunlight into near pitch black darkness! P3200 is certainly a powerful weapon to keep in your arsenal! It’s unique, practical and versatile.
Happily, the New Kodak TMAX P3200 appears to be exactly the same old TMAX P3200 that we already knew and loved. No formula updates, no corner cutting, no bullshit.
P3200 is back and it’s ready to ROCK!
Thanks for reading, now, go burn some film and be sure to check out Vinyl Rhino when they visit your town!
Follow, Favorite, Like, Add, Contact Johnny Martyr
Thanks for this review of the reintroduced film! I look forward to trying some.
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Really nice shots of the band.
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Thanks so much Tim! It’s been an honor to work with TMAX P3200 and Vinyl Rhino! Let me know when you post some of your P3200 work, I am looking forward to seeing how everyone takes advantage of this incredible film!
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“Though I shot at box speed, I decided to process for 6400 as I recall processing a stop faster than the film was rated gave images a richer contrast.”
This is how I shoot/develop Tri-X and HP5+. I rate at 800 then push two stops (at 1600) in processing. I arrived at this about a year ago and I love the look.
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Probably most films with good latitude can benefit from a 1 or 2 stop push, providing that contrast is a goal. Thanks for the comment!
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These photos are terrific, full stop!
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Your comments are always greatly appreciated Jim!
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What a great series of shots from Saturday. Glad you were here to capture the evening. Cheers.
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Thanks so much for hosting a kick-ass show! And hats off to your lighting and sound techs!
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It’s amazing how sharp it looks despite (or because of) grain.
The Delta 3200 I don’t like at all, but I developed in Microphen and that might be the reason.
For the low grain guys: Take a larger format than 35mm (as soon as available) or try a two-bath developer like Thornton.
With the no longer available Spuersinn HCD two bath developer it was even possible to develop an Ilford HP5+ or Bergger Pancro 400 up to ISO 25.600 with hardly any grain (35mm).
I would have loved to test it with Tmax 3200 – but gone.
I am now going to test Tmax 3200 in 510-Pyro, already working well with Tmax 400.
I don’t push in low light conditions, I push in low contrast scenes.
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Add on…
A year ago I shot a Tmax 3200 from ’91
@ISO 250 but developed like ISO 3200.
Fog like hell (log D 0.5) but beautifull pictures on top. Interestingly a lot of grain when scanned but hardly any grain when printed.
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Really informative comments, thank you!
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Beautiful shots, I’m inspired! I’ll be getting some as soon as Cinestill has it back in stock…
Is this the roll you’re sending into Kodak for their new publicity stuff?
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Thanks so much Joe! The greatest part about sharing these so far has been all the enthusiasm of other shooters to try their hand at this film.
I burned 4 rolls on the band and provided all the files to Kodak while typing this up. You will see them on their social media soon!
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Can’t wait!
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I will be looking forward to your blog! 😉
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HI Johnny, my name is Kevin Sullivan, and I work with Photo District News: https://pdnpulse.pdnonline.com/.
Would you be open to allowing us to republish this post on our site? We’d be happy to plug your work and link back to the original piece. You can reach me at ksully [at] gmail [dot] com if interested. Thanks!
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Hi Kevin, thanks so much for your interest in my write-up and photos. Please go ahead and republish. If you could provide the link and any further correspondence to JohnnyMartyr@Hotmail.com that would be most appreciated.
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