Yerba Buena Gardens Area (Japan Camera Hunter Pan 400)

Monochrome image of reflections on a matte metal tiled surface

With my beloved Kodak Plus-X 125 gone forever, I have been sampling monochrome films.  Japan Camera Hunter Pan 400 is a fast, “true” black and white (by which I mean it can be developed in chemistry for monochrome film) film with deep shadows and good contrast.

I’m assembling a collection of both bright and dark buildings and details to show off this film’s “look.”

 

I shot JCH on the same day I used Ilford XP2 in the same conditions with my twin lens reflex camera, and so had opportunities to compare the two head-to-head.  In fact, I chose the end of one roll to shoot a different angle of the same building with similar exposure settings: look at the difference!

Two monochrome images of the same historic building with a complex facade of arched windows
JCH is on the left, Ilford XP2 is on the right. Exposures were similar. Both render detail finely: there are layers to the black tones in JCH.  Ilford shows more detail in the mid and lighter tones.

JCH has deeper shadows, which still preserve shadow detail, but are more dramatic.  The overall images are bolder (especially in smaller sizes or from afar) as a result.  JCH is a superb option for dramatic and bold black and white images.