I would be curious to hear how you like ILFORD Ortho Plus in general and in which situations you are shooting it. Not sure I can put my finger on it yet. PS: I had to take down the initial video for technical reasons that I couldn't solve in RU-vid Studio. Sorry for the inconveniences.
Most professional review I have seen on RU-vid about this film by now. The film shines in my opinion in architecture and also street, with high contrast and good light. In Street this can create artistic effects highlighting e.g. lighter dressed people in darker surroundings. Backlighted situations as you show render with the full scale of dynamic range and deep blacks.
The re-upload reminded me that I still had this video on my list to watch. Happy I did not accidentally miss it, such a detailed and elaborate review - the architecture shoots were my favorites.
Truly excellent results from the Ortho Plus film Marcus, I am very impressed with it's qualities, and your photos. I have 35mm and 120 rolls to try, but due to the Covid situation haven't had a chance yet. I currently have Ferrania P30 in my M6 and will switch to Ortho Plus next. Thank you for another excellent video.
@@TheMPhotography Hello Marcus, I really like P30. The contrast is something special. I was one of the original Ferrania Kickstarter investors, and after patiently waiting for the colour film, took the option to try some P30 instead, so I have quite a few rolls in stock! I really do like it and look forward to hearing your thoughts in your video. Have a great Sunday.
Nice work! Fair point about getting through 36 frames of this. Maybe better suited to 120? Just ordered a few rolls myself after this to give it a shot in an RB67. Thanks for the informative video and great examples.
This film is so good an pro level that the lenses really can matter and it can make use of the optics. One can really shape the desired look by the choice of the lens. A low contrast lens would give some more flexibility in post.
It is untrue. The film is blind for RED. You are wrong on greens and blues. Grain and contrast are normal as it was in 1933. Much blabla By the way, do you think that the ortho film fits in other camera's?