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Review Summary
2011-04-27T21:00:00
I develop at [...] and ask that the negatives be un-cut. Then I scan at 9600x9600 GS with all options off. Then do minimal gradient map post-processing in Photoshop.
henremurr
2010-11-24T19:00:00
I think this film is great! I first bought some at a drug store because it said it could be processed C-41, the same as color. I thought that was a cool feature. It's hard to find a place where I live that processes B&W film, and its usually more expensive than color. Works great in my Minolta SLR and the photos look excellent! I highly recommend it!
BENZEEL
2010-09-29T21:00:00
Picked this up on a goof on vacation at a local pharmacy when it caught my eye and I didnt have any B&W film. So I got it just to see what it would produce. Obviously not up to the standards of Ilford, but it was surprisingly good. Used it with Orange, Yellow and naked. I preferred the Yellow filter shots of the 3. I am happy with it and surprised at what it produced. Not for architecture or fine art.
WAYNE H.
2010-03-28T21:00:00
This is my go-to film I grab whenever I feel like doing some recreational film shooting. It's got some surprising sharpness to it, a fine grain, and the fact you can get it so easily developed and printed even at any grocery or corner pharmacy just adds on to the handiness. My only nitpick is that the contrast is a little flat and there's a slight color tint on it. Nothing you can't improve on in post processing, though. And for the price and convenience, this is one to buy and shoot freely.
Logan C.
2007-09-05T21:00:00
I volunteer teach at a private school and each year I give graduates 2 rolls of this film so they can continue their black and white interests(I teach them only b&w). I sometimes use it myself when I may not want to use the school darkroom during the hot summer months. (no AC)
phototeach
2007-06-14T21:00:00
I have experienced excellent results with this highly versatile film for many years. Its fairly fine grain permits great quality enlargements and the tonal range reproduces accurately. It's become my only choice for travel and landscape B&Ws!
Jeff
2007-03-13T21:00:00
A great b&w film!
James C.
KODAK PROFESSIONAL BW400CN film is a multi-purpose, black-and-white chromogenic film designed for processing in color negative chemistry. Different from traditional black-and-white films, it provides the elegance of black-and-white imagery with the convenience of printing on color negative paper. BW400CN provides extremely fine grain, outstanding highlight and shadow detail, and a smooth neutral tone scale. The film simplifies the way photographers make and sell high-quality black-and-white prints, and it can be developed in any professional lab or retail establishment running a C-41 Process.