sanking said:
Or let me put it another way. OK, so you decide to "develop your film to a given CI", but after development you discover that the CI is different from the one to which you "developed your film."
OK, to what CI did you really develop your film? And is that question different than asking, "to what CI was your film developed"? Sandy
Sandy the questions in your post here indicate to me that you (and probably many others) are having a disconnect between the act of measuring the CI of a piece of film, and developing that piece of film to a predetermined CI. They are two different acts.
sanking said:
Or let me put it another way. OK, so you decide to "develop your film to a given CI", but after development you discover that the CI is different from the one to which you "developed your film."
Good question! I'm certain that happens almost every time you, or I, or anyone develops film. You've made a measurement in the field of your subjects luminance range, be it with the Zone System, BTZS, or any other system that you have devised to measure it. You go back to your darkroom, unload your film, and get ready to process it. In the past, you've done some tests and you have a table or graph that you have associated development times to your subjects conditions. So based on that measurement of the subject luminance range, you pick a developer time, temp, method of agitation... By doing this, you have decided to develop your film to a predetermined level of overall negative contrast. You then go and process that film. You do things as carefully and consistantly as possible, and because you are a good darkroom technician, you try to minimize any influences on the development process. Afterall, if you goof, you will most likely not achieve that desired level of development, your target CI.
The key here is to have good process control - and I don't mean "process" as in "film processing", I mean it in the quality control sense. All your development times are based on measurements that have been made under a (hopefully) controlled environment and set of conditions. The accuracy of your time measurements, the precision and readability of your thermometer, the strength and age of your developer, its actual pH, the remaining buffering capacity..., your ability to agitate your film in a consistent manner, the ratio of film to developer volume, the total amount of silver that was exposed on the sheet. All these things and more affect the final amount of development your film recieves - they will affect the actual CI.
Depending on how well you can do these things, you should be able to get pretty close to your desired amount of overall negative contrast. Many of us here may actually not be able to, someone that is using a large dip and dunk processor will probably be able to hit the target CI. Especially if they have calibrated the system recently.
Do you need to have measured the actual CI you set out to hit? Maybe not. Maybe one guy had a target CI was 0.60, and he did run a control strip with the run and with 5 runs got measured CIs of 0.59, 0.63, 0.58, 0.70, and 0.61. Maybe the guy with the dip'n'dunk can consistently get CI results centered between 0.58 and 0.62. And I mean consistently, centered around 0.60. The dip'n'dunk guy would be in better control than the other guy. The guy with the dip'n'dunk can come to the reasonable conclusion, that when the dip'n'dunk machine is in control, he can get a CI of 0.60, or more precisely stated 0.60+/-0.02. The other guy, cannot be as confident in his results, but even he has the beginning of some statistical basis to make a claim that he can get hit a CI close to 0.60 (the actual average was 0.62, but his standard deviation (0.05) is not that good). He needs to work on his process control.
I hope you haven't fallen asleep yet, as I'm ready to bring it together.
sanking said:
OK, to what CI did you really develop your film? And is that question different than asking, "to what CI was your film developed"? Sandy
It is only really different if you do not have very good process control. If you do have good process control, you can say, with good confidence, that you did develop any particular film to some particular CI. If you have poor process control, then you may have an idea of a probably range of CIs that were achieved.
So ultimately, you will have to decide if you have good process control. If so, you can make these conclusions. And you don't need to run a control strip alongside every piece of film, either.
If you can't get consistent, then it's probably better not to.
Please note at no time in this did you have to have a full range of exposed tones on any of the film that you processed (except the ones that you actually used to make the CI calculations) - all the film will have a CI of whatever CI the run was at. Even if the film was blank...