2F...so you did stand development in a tray? How did it turn out? No mottling or uneveness?
Well.....Funny you should ask. I pulled the masking tape label off of the one side of the holder that had been exposed, set it down, went to do something, and came back and prepared all the solutions. It was an extremely important shot that was impossible to have shot twice, as it was a long exposure (about 25 minutes) of me digging the grave for my 17-year-old cat in my back yard. I was about to hit the lights and begin when I realized that I forget whether I had put the exposed side of the holder face up or face down. I said to myself, "It would be logical if I had put the exposed sheet face down", so I developed that sheet first. The whole hour in the dark, I was hoping that the worst was not true...that I was not spending an hour developing a blank sheet of film...but of course, it was...
Chalk this one up in the stupid view camera mistakes thread. It's a new one for me.
The picture itself came out surprisingly well, considering the exposure situation. It was horribly backlit, and there was almost no light in the foreground. The sun had already gone down. I used ND to slow down the exposure to a workable length. However, in hindsight, I think I used too much. I stacked a one stop and a two stop, and would have done better with one or the other. I was actually afraid that the sky would be so blown out that it might bleed and ruin the rest of the negative. On the neg, however, the sky was restrained quite well, and whatever could be dug out of the thin foreground was dug. You could actually see through the sky's density quite well, just holding the neg up to room lights. It is a bear of a negative for sure. It will be printable, though pt/pd possibilities are what I really had in mind for this one. I'll have to see about that...HA! I may intensify, to tell you the truth (sacrifice some sky in order to pop the foreground, and then mask it out), but I am going to try to print it first. I did not get any of the ghosting human figure (myself) that I wanted, though I did get a few ghosts of shovels and pick axes, so there will be an implied narrative of some sort of suburban backyard burial...and I think there may be some smoothed out grass among the sharp blades. I will see for sure once I get a loupe on it today.
There were no developing issues like the ones you mentioned. However, I
did agitate for one minute initially, and then 30 seconds every minute, so it was not a full-on stand development. I also flipped the sheet every agitation cycle (face up to face down, and vice versa.) I have done it before plenty of times, and never had any unevenness. I have not tried to let a sheet stand for an hour.
I think in retrospect, given the same exposure, I would have gone two hours in development, and reduced the agitation cycles to 15 minutes. Punching the foreground a little more would have been worth losing some sky.
P.S. I am going back again today, to spend another 8 hours as Gollum....I still have 16 sheets of 5x7 to go!