*Edit* I just realized how misleading my title could have been. I do not mean push/pulling during development. Not sure if there's a term for what I've mentioned below, but hopefully people will be able to understand my gibberish
Hello folks!
I'm not sure how often this is asked, so please forgive me if it has and point me in the right direction!
I've been shooting a few different types of film lately. Haven't processed them yet (I'll be developing some negatives tonight! Wish me luck!). So far I've shot Acros 100, FP4, Delta 400, Delta 3200, and TMY400. While going through some photos and through the forums, it seems like people often expose their negatives at a different ISO then the film speed actually is.
The one I see most often is people exposing Delta 3200 at 1600. I guess this follows the "expose for the shadows" and "develop for the highlights" rule, but is there any other reason for this? When developing, do these people develop at the normal development times as if the film was rated at 3200? I've also seen some people shooting ISO 400 film at ISO 3200. Not sure which particular film they used, but I would be interested in which one is best for doing this. Also, how grainy would the negatives produce (35mm and 120)? Would it be grainier than Delta 3200 or do both films produce completely different characteristics?
People also mention EI, which I *THINK* is Exposure Index. What exactly does this mean?
Sorry for so many questions! I'm really just bursting at the seams with them, but I'm holding back
Thanks for your help,
Jason
Hello folks!
I'm not sure how often this is asked, so please forgive me if it has and point me in the right direction!
I've been shooting a few different types of film lately. Haven't processed them yet (I'll be developing some negatives tonight! Wish me luck!). So far I've shot Acros 100, FP4, Delta 400, Delta 3200, and TMY400. While going through some photos and through the forums, it seems like people often expose their negatives at a different ISO then the film speed actually is.
The one I see most often is people exposing Delta 3200 at 1600. I guess this follows the "expose for the shadows" and "develop for the highlights" rule, but is there any other reason for this? When developing, do these people develop at the normal development times as if the film was rated at 3200? I've also seen some people shooting ISO 400 film at ISO 3200. Not sure which particular film they used, but I would be interested in which one is best for doing this. Also, how grainy would the negatives produce (35mm and 120)? Would it be grainier than Delta 3200 or do both films produce completely different characteristics?
People also mention EI, which I *THINK* is Exposure Index. What exactly does this mean?
Sorry for so many questions! I'm really just bursting at the seams with them, but I'm holding back

Thanks for your help,
Jason
