Ilford · ISO 400 B&W negative

Ilford XP2 Super 400

B&W negative ISO 400 In production C-41 process · wide latitude · chromogenic

XP2 Super is a chromogenic film, meaning it forms dye clouds in C-41 chemistry rather than silver grains. The result looks like a conventional B&W negative when printed or scanned, but the underlying structure is closer to color negative film than to HP5+. Any C-41 line can process it, which is the main practical appeal: in any town with a one-hour lab, you can get your B&W negative back the same day without hunting for a specialist.

The scanning characteristics are genuinely different from silver-based stocks. The dye grain structure scans with higher apparent sharpness and less noise at ISO 400 than HP5+ at the same speed. Labs sometimes auto-correct XP2 toward warm tones in their default scan profiles; requesting a flat neutral scan and handling the tone curve yourself produces a cleaner result.

Latitude is the other reason photographers choose XP2. Usable exposures range from around ISO 50 to 800 on a single roll, and the film compresses highlights graciously. Shooting a mix of interior shadow and bright window on the same roll in C-41 development is viable in a way it is not with conventional silver B&W developed normally. Fashion photographers and event shooters who need a fast turnaround without setting up their own lab have relied on this since the XP1 days.

XP2 does not push well past 800. It is designed for wide-latitude exposure, not speed extraction. Trying to push to 1600 in standard C-41 development gives thin, muddy shadows.

Reciprocity exponent is 1.31. Long exposures correct the same way as HP5+ or SFX. Zone Light Meter applies the standard correction past one second. The chromogenic structure does not change the reciprocity behavior in any meaningful way, so the same curve applies.

How the app handles this stock

  • Box speed: ISO 400. Picker exposes pull/push chips so you can shoot it at any speed you want and the meter follows.
  • Reciprocity: Above one second the app raises metered time to the power of 1.31.
  • Expired film: if you load an old roll, set the expiry year and storage in the app and the ISO scales for you. B&W negative decay rates are baked in.

Frequently asked questions

What ISO is Ilford XP2 Super 400?

Ilford XP2 Super 400 is an ISO 400 b&w negative film from Ilford. You can rate it at box speed or push and pull it; set the speed you actually shot and the meter follows.

Is Ilford XP2 Super 400 still in production?

Yes. Ilford XP2 Super 400 is a current film you can still buy new.

Does Ilford XP2 Super 400 suffer from reciprocity failure?

Yes, on exposures longer than about one second. Its reciprocity exponent is 1.31, so a metered 10 seconds becomes about 20 seconds. Zone Light Meter applies this automatically.

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