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Kodak Professional T-max 400 Black And White Negative Film (35mm Roll Film, 100' Roll, Expired 08/2023)

Kodak Professional T-max 400 Black And White Negative Film (35mm Roll Film, 100' Roll, Expired 08/2023)
  • Product Code: ga142730
  • Availability: In Stock

$509.85 $693.40

Kodak's Professional T-Max 400 is a high-speed panchromatic black and white negative film featuring a unique T-GRAIN emulsion to provide a very fine grain structure with a high degree of sharpness and edge detail. It has a nominal sensitivity of ISO 400/27° along with a wide exposure latitude for rating the film up to EI 1600 and push developing. Its versatility benefits working in difficult lighting conditions and with moving subjects, and its fine grain profile, broad tonal range, and high resolving power benefit scanning and enlarging applications. Additionally, the film is well-suited to scientific and biomedical work, especially when fluorescence in photography is required.

This item is one 100'-long roll of standard-perforation 35mm film designed for bulk loading applications, expired on August 2023.

Panchromatic B&W Negative Film    ISO 400/27° in Standard Process    Very Fine Grain, T-GRAIN Emulsion    High Sharpness and Edge Detail    Versatile Speed & Wide Exposure Latitude

Parameters
Film Format35mm
Film TypePanchromatic B&W Negative
ISO/ASA Film Speed400
Film ProcessingStandard Black and White Chemistry
Number of Rolls1
Roll Length100' / 30.48 m
Packaging Info
Box Dimensions (LxWxH)4.4 x 4.4 x 2"

Related Questions and Answers

Q: 1. Can I use the c-41 on this film?

A: No this is not a C41 film . You need to develop with black and white chemicals like D76.

Q: 2. Which developer would be preferable for Tmax 100 shot at box speed. Kodak HC110 or R09 or any other?

A: hc110 is a good developer but i still feel the best fine grain compensation developer is still edwal fg7 it is still made look it up on the internet some places still sell it best developer i have ever used

Q: 3. How does this film hold when pushed to 1600,3200 and 6400 iso?

A: T-Max is well known to be able to be pushed to 1600. However, I don't know how it holds up after that. I've heard of HP-5 being pushed to 3200 but you would need to stand develop that roll or it would be way too contrast.

Q: 4. Can I get this in a pack (like 5 or 10)?

A: This film is priced the same per roll regardless of what quantity you purchase. We do not currently have it bundled in any quantity pack, but you may purchase it at whatever quantity you prefer.

Q: 5. Does this product come with a film canister for each roll you buy?

A: yes it comes

Q: 6. How many 36 frames rolls can this 100 feet roll can yield? Thanks.

A: You could get about twenty 36 exposure rolls of film from a 100' roll of bulk film.

Q: 7. What is the difference between Kodak TMax black and white film and Kodak TriX film? Thanks! :)

A: There are 3 differences between Tri-X and T-Max400. First, T-Max 400 has a very long, linear scale. Tri-X has a shoulder. This means Tri-X make it easy to get plenty of shadow and midtone detail with less worry about highlights going all white. On the other hand, T-Max 400 gives brilliant and subtle highlights that TX just can't. Secondly, T-Max 400 gives a little more shadow speed and greater 'pushability', Third, T-Max 400 has greater resolution than Tri-X. Both great films, and compliment each other.

Q: 8. Is this bulk roll expiring soon?

A: Unfortunately we do not have access to the expiration date, but B&H does not sell film that is within 6 months of expiring as new.

Q: 9. What is the film speed rating of this film?

A: It says 400 on the box.

Q: 10. When is the expiry date of the film

A: Current inventory in our 420 superstore has an expiration date of May 2022. Based on the batch received, inventory in possession might have varying dates around the same approximate time period.

17/08/2024

Great black and white film, not too contrasty while still retaining amazing tonality and sharpness with super fine grain. I was always partial towards Ilford black and whit films, but this is a great surprise. I have used it for cityscapes and portraits with great results.

5
05/08/2024

This is a nice fine-grain film. Not super contrasty but contrasty enough. Reminds me of plus-x. I've been using D76 1:1 with it to good effect.

5
01/07/2024

Great grain for making 11x14 prints.

5
21/06/2024

A quality B&W film for multiple uses but great daylight shooting. Film keep getting pricier so always good to get a roll for a decent price.

5
23/05/2024

Very nice medium speed film. I've been developing with D76 1:1 and find the grain fine and the tonal range good. It is a bit on the pricey side but seems a good solid medium speed film.

5
21/05/2024

Probably the only photographic product left bearing the Kodak name that is reliable, consistent and manufactured (as far as I know) in Rochester. As long as it remains so, I'll continue to purchase this film along with 400 Tmax .

5
03/04/2024

Got them in a very short time!

5
30/11/-0001

Its a nice film to throw into a point and shoot.

5

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