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- Jan 13, 2007
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I continue to refine my B&W reversal process and I have a question.
I notice the my latest films are covered in tiny pockmarks...like my windshield looked after I drove too fast through the sandy wind at the beach. The defects appear on both sides of the film. So, I am thinking that something scratched the heck out of my photo. The biggest change in my most recent development run was that I used continuous agitation (steel tank on Beseler Motor Base) for the bleach step. Would it be inconceivable for the particles of silver (which are about that size in the pour-off) to have abraded the film base and emulsion during extended agitation?
I ran two different films (Efke and Tmax) through the same process and they came out with the same pockmarks so I am sure it is not a manufacturer defect.
A sample photo is attached. It is a 100% crop of a 1200DPI scan. The marks on the emulsion side (down) appear white and those on the base side (up) appear black. When I hold the slide up to the light, they all appear white.
If not the silver particles, then what? And if so, that is not good. Ideas?
I notice the my latest films are covered in tiny pockmarks...like my windshield looked after I drove too fast through the sandy wind at the beach. The defects appear on both sides of the film. So, I am thinking that something scratched the heck out of my photo. The biggest change in my most recent development run was that I used continuous agitation (steel tank on Beseler Motor Base) for the bleach step. Would it be inconceivable for the particles of silver (which are about that size in the pour-off) to have abraded the film base and emulsion during extended agitation?
I ran two different films (Efke and Tmax) through the same process and they came out with the same pockmarks so I am sure it is not a manufacturer defect.
A sample photo is attached. It is a 100% crop of a 1200DPI scan. The marks on the emulsion side (down) appear white and those on the base side (up) appear black. When I hold the slide up to the light, they all appear white.
If not the silver particles, then what? And if so, that is not good. Ideas?
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