Fujifilm Neopan 400 Presto
It’s always nice to get a surprise gift in the mail. It’s especially nice, as an analog photographer, when that gift is some film. So it was a few months ago when a package arrived from my friend and fellow photo-blogger Jim Grey containing several rolls of Fujifilm Neopan 400 Presto black and white film. “Presto” was the Japanese retail version of this film. Here in the US, it was called Neopan Professional. Fuji discontinued this emulsion around 2013, but the stock remained in photo stores for several years thereafter.
I have shot plenty of Fuji’s 100 ISO black and white ACROS and like it every much, so I was anxious to try this faster film. Jim said that the film had always been cold stored so I assumed it would perform close to fresh.
I was working on a video project for my company and took my Nikon F5 loaded with Presto to the video shoot. I clicked off these shots indoors under bright LED lighting. I let the F5’s DX reader set the camera to the film’s box speed.
Video shoot, behind the scenes
I grabbed the F5 one sunny Saturday afternoon, mounted my Nikkor 80-200 f/2.8 AF-D ED and shot the dogs at play in the park. I thought that the fast telephoto and the 400 ISO film would be a good combination once the dogs got retrieving their ball.
And resting after.
I’ve shot enough Kodak Tri-X over my 50 years of film photography that I know it well and can get consistently good results, whether I process it myself or send it out to the lab. I am comfortable enough with Tri-X that I feel the freedom to be able to concentrate on finding interesting subject matter and putting more thought into composition. I think I got decent results from Fuji Neopan 400 my first time out and wish it were still in production so I could know it better. For now, I’ll just enjoy these last few rolls that I’ve been gifted and feel grateful for having had the opportunity.