FPP DEREV PAN 400 - Film Review

DEREV PAN 400
film index
Rating
Rated 4 out of 5
TDR Rating
Rated 4.3 out of 5
TypeBW
Brand FPP
ISO400
Format35mm
Price
$ $ $
Contrast
+ + + + +
Latitude
+ + + + +
GrainFine - Coarse
+ + + + +

Hand-rolled into 36 exposure cartridges, Film Photography Project’s new panchromatic BW film line DEREV is named after the forests of the Ukraine, its country of origin as a scientific aerial photographic film.

A panchromatic mylar based film with good exposure latitude and extremely sharp fine grain. If you like higher contrast film like Kodak Tri-X 400 but was to change things up, we highly recommend this film as it has a similar look to Tri-X but with bloomier highlights and slightly higher contrast!

Derev PAN 400 for sale here.

35mm / Hand-Rolled / BW / 36 exp / 400 iso / DX Coded  / Process BW

 

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4.3
Rated 4.3 out of 5
4.3 out of 5 stars (based on 4 reviews)
Excellent75%
Very good0%
Average0%
Poor25%
Terrible0%

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Very nice film, with quirks

Rated 5 out of 5
June 11, 2026

Excellent image quality. Very sharp with fine grain for a fast film. High contrast but good tonal gradation too–I think the very clear Mylar (not celluloid) base contributes to this. It is also very flat, and scans beautifully.

The Mylar base comes with a couple of quirks though. They warn about light piping, take this seriously. Store in darkness and load in low light to avoid fogging. The other is that is is very thin and soft, and can be very difficult to load onto a stainless reel. After a few rolls I can do it pretty well though. I think it would be easier with a Paterson style reel, and should be no problem for commercial equipment.

Geoff

Very Difficult

Rated 2 out of 5
February 19, 2026

It’s almost impossible to load on a spiral. Very thin backing, flexible, and feels a bit sticky.

Contrast and quality good, but terrible to use

Alistair Bolt

Sharp Grain

Rated 5 out of 5
December 14, 2021

This is an amazing film stock. I shot a roll on a Nikon FA and developed it in XTol stock. The only downside is that the film is thin so it takes a little extra care to load it on a spiral reel. The results are worth the effort.

Dave Willis