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Review Summary
2016-04-19T14:31:50
I have some antique cameras that I'm testing to send my nieces daughter glad this stuff is still around.
Thomas J.
2014-04-14T21:00:00
Great film from exposure, development, to print!
James C.
2013-06-10T21:00:00
Well T-Max 120 is what it is, but what's important here is that Adorama is the best place to get it. Best prices, fast shipping.
LARRY S.
2013-03-18T21:00:00
I love shooting my street shots in black and white and I've used the Tri-x a few times and have not been disappointed at all. I love how my blacks stay black and yet retain detail so well. It just shows how much dynamic range there is in film over digital.
DENNIS C.
2012-08-19T21:00:00
This remains one of my favorite 400 iso film. It has great tonal range, even when compare to tmax100 film. This film is tolerant to a variety of kodak developers. For most of the time, I use D76 for all of my Tmax film.
PV
2012-07-30T21:00:00
Great black and white film.
WESLEY S.
2012-06-26T21:00:00
All rolls of this film I have shot had light leaks along the edges. Some ruined some good shots. No such problems with films from other manufacturers. Other than that, it took relatively long fixing to clear properly, but that was easy to adjust to.
Kuniyoshi
2012-05-06T21:00:00
I use T-Max 400 in 35mm and 120, it's my favorite film for all my B&W photography, from street photos, to travel to portraits. This is a very sharp film, with 100 ISO grain. After developing the film stays very flat and it's so very easy to scan.
MARIO H.
2011-12-28T19:00:00
its awesome
jim r.
2011-12-28T19:00:00
I have an unhealthy infatuation with this film... specifically, I love negatives exposed at 1600 and developed in HC-110 (B) - they have wonderful tonality, perfect contrast and tight grain. If I'm not shooting it at 1600, I rate at 800 over 400 for increased contrast. I can't speak to printing from the negative, but I can say that it scans quite well. I can't recommend it enough.
george c.
2011-12-04T19:00:00
Excellent tonal range, very fine grain. This film has extra-thick base, so after developing stays flat and so much easier to scan. This film is "pushable" up to 3200 ISO with several developers, my favorites are Kodak Xtol and D-76.
herreraimage
2011-11-27T19:00:00
Tri-X is one of the best BW films on the market, it has a lot of "character" so it's ideal for fine-art photography, Tri-X it's very consistent, it has an outstanding tonal range and it "pushes" very well with many developers, I rated this film up to 3200 ISO developed in Kodak Xtol with excellent results.
MARIO H.
2011-10-09T21:00:00
I keep more of the T-Max 400 on hand than any other film. It's such a good all around B&W film. Low grain and great detail.
Chan
2011-10-09T21:00:00
I keep more of this film on hand than any other. It's such a great all around B&W film. The details you get with this film are great! I use it mainly for portraits.
Chan W.
2010-07-25T21:00:00
I've shot this film for a while and have never been disappointed. When I bought a medium format camera this was the first film I used to test it out because I knew I could count on the film. It's simple, fast, and cheap to develop within the Tmax brand and since my very first roll I've always gotten frames that look excellent. It's a great film to get started in B&W development at home and it's a film I keep coming back to.
Topslakr
2008-08-05T21:00:00
Excellent film; for the purist.
Phil
2008-04-15T21:00:00
USED THE FILM WITH THREE FILTERS TO SLOW DOWN THE SPEED AND FOUND IT GAVE ME EXCELLENT RESULTS WITH HIGH CONTRAST GREAT DETAIL
BURRHEAD
2007-02-04T19:00:00
Good all around film.
photogirl
KODAK T-MAX 400 Professional Film is a continuous-tone panchromatic black-and-white negative film especially useful for photographing dimly lighted subjects or fast action, for extending flash distance range, and for photographing subjects that require good depth of field and fast shutter speeds with maximum image quality for the film speed. It is also useful for scientific and biomedical work, especially when fluorescence photography is required. It has high speed (ISO 400/27° in most developers), very high sharpness, extremely fine grain, and high resolving power; it allows a high degree of enlargement.
A continuous tone, panchromatic black-and-white negative film that is especially useful for photographing dimly lighted subjects, fast action, extended range flash pictures, and subjects that require good depth of field. This film is highly useful for scientific and biomedical work, especially when fluorescence photography is required. Its high speed (EI 400), very high sharpness, extremely fine grain, and high resolving power enable a high degree of enlargement. You can expose it at a speed of EI 800 with normal processing, or at EI 1600 with push-processing to obtain excellent results. Applications include:
Fluorescence Photomicrography
Darkfield Photomicrography
Photomicrography of live biological specimens