Hardly any examples in the forum with the Foma Retropan 320 film. Wonder why.
The other day, talking with my confrère Javi (MacArron in this and in other forums) through whatsapp about the Retropan, he asked me if I've developed it in D-76 - I answered him that the only process I've applied to this film is the reversal, obtaining black and white slides from it. We exchanged some other messages about that and, finally, he asked me to share my experiences if I finally develop the Retropan with a "normal" developer, not the Foma dedicated.
I have a box of 4x5 sheets in the fridge and since the weather is finally good, bright and dry, last Sunday I went out for a walk and exposed three plates which I show you.
First of all, I believe that Foma is very optimistic about the ISO of their films - with this belief, my first guess was to place an ISO 100 for the Retropan.
The developer employed is the Barry Thornton two bath developer - 21 degrees/5 minutes in bath A, 20 degrees/5:30 minutes in bath B. Fixed with plain hypo for 4 minutes. Some mistakes in the process since it seems I had air bubbles - I didn't clone them. Digitized with my Samsung NX 100 + bellows + EL-Nikkor 5.6/80mm, processed with dcraw and Gimp. Lens in this first set is Rodenstock Ysar 4.5/150mm.
As for comparison, these next two images are also Retropan - I shot them in January or February if I recall correctly. The main difference is that these are reversal processed, i.e., they are slides. A lot of difference, in my opinion - the resulting image here is much more clean and tones are more beautiful. The grain is absolutely absent. Lens in this set is Schneider Angulon 6.8/90mm.
I'm pretty sure I don't like this film...