ogxtina
Member
I have been shooting film for a while now, but I've been developing my film at home for a little over a year now. Earlier this month, I developed a roll of 35mm HP5 I shot at box speed over the summer (left). The negatives turned out super dense compared to other rolls of HP5 I shot and developed on the same camera (right).
I have read the Ilford trouble shooting guide, and know it's not an issue with my camera or meter (a Minolta Maxxum 7000, I got this particular body 2 years ago to replace the one my father had handed down to me). The meter is working, and the pics on the roll were taken on different days and times in different locations, so the light was always different, and none of the rolls I've shot since have shown this issue throughout the whole roll (And actually, last pic is a scan from the roll. I remember being worried it would be UNDERexposed because of the heavily wooded location). I always make the same dilution out of Arista liquid developer and HP5 is the stock I taught myself development on, so the time was definitely the same.
For future reference, since I'm still refining my developing skills, I was wondering
1) How much agitation is TOO MUCH agitation that could cause a problem like this?
2) Although the negatives are dense, they seem to scan okay (last photo). Is a dense negative like this a dealbreaker for things like printing? I was able to scan them fine using my plustek, but as they're photos from an out of state job I had this past year, it's of a location I probably won't return to, so it's this or nothing for the shots.
I have read the Ilford trouble shooting guide, and know it's not an issue with my camera or meter (a Minolta Maxxum 7000, I got this particular body 2 years ago to replace the one my father had handed down to me). The meter is working, and the pics on the roll were taken on different days and times in different locations, so the light was always different, and none of the rolls I've shot since have shown this issue throughout the whole roll (And actually, last pic is a scan from the roll. I remember being worried it would be UNDERexposed because of the heavily wooded location). I always make the same dilution out of Arista liquid developer and HP5 is the stock I taught myself development on, so the time was definitely the same.
For future reference, since I'm still refining my developing skills, I was wondering
1) How much agitation is TOO MUCH agitation that could cause a problem like this?
2) Although the negatives are dense, they seem to scan okay (last photo). Is a dense negative like this a dealbreaker for things like printing? I was able to scan them fine using my plustek, but as they're photos from an out of state job I had this past year, it's of a location I probably won't return to, so it's this or nothing for the shots.