I am on the cusp of giving up color printing because of the shortage of materials (film, choice of paper, and expensive chemicals) Now another reason may have cropped up and one that I am at a loss to work out what is going wrong.
My set up is in a room approximately 5m x 2.5m narrowing at one end to 1.5m. The wall are painted off white. My 'wet bench' is on one side with a DUKA safelight directly behind me facing the wall so the light is always reflected. The light is at the '10' setting on the adjustable internal baffle. The problem is an almost impossible situation where I cannot get rid of a cyan cast. The RA4 Developer is one made by Fuji, the paper is Fuji. (I prefer Kodak for both of these but they are unobtainable in UK.) The film stock is a mixture of 35mm and 120 Kodak and Fuji. All the processing is done in a NOVA 12x16 deep-tank which is strictly replenished by the recommended quantity of developer (Fuji's figures).
Suspecting the safelight was at fault, although I have used one for at least 28 years with no problems. I carried out a strip test where I exposed a piece of printing paper where I exposed strips of the paper for up to 50 seconds in 10 second steps. It was developed (45s) stop bath (15s) followed by bleach fix (45s) and only on the last strip was there any visible change of colour. Even that was not so much cyan, but just a very faint darkening from the white paper which was of course the 50second step.
I have timed my process from taking the paper out of the box, exposing it under the enlarger, then to putting it into the processor and with a total time of 35s. My average exposure under the enlarger is around 15s using 35mm or 120 film. In the processor that is to all intents and purposes without any light exposure because the borders are pure white.
To try to correct the cyan cast I altered the filtration by adding Yellow and Magenta and even by as little as 5-10units (Kodak values and I never use the Cyan filtration) it just flips to the opposite colour cast. There does not seem to be a happy medium. I have even changed the paper from the one I have been using, to a new box of Fuji with a completely different batch number and that does not make any noticeable difference.
When printing B&W I use the same enlarger and the magenta and yellow filters to change the grades and there is never problem.
My set up is in a room approximately 5m x 2.5m narrowing at one end to 1.5m. The wall are painted off white. My 'wet bench' is on one side with a DUKA safelight directly behind me facing the wall so the light is always reflected. The light is at the '10' setting on the adjustable internal baffle. The problem is an almost impossible situation where I cannot get rid of a cyan cast. The RA4 Developer is one made by Fuji, the paper is Fuji. (I prefer Kodak for both of these but they are unobtainable in UK.) The film stock is a mixture of 35mm and 120 Kodak and Fuji. All the processing is done in a NOVA 12x16 deep-tank which is strictly replenished by the recommended quantity of developer (Fuji's figures).
Suspecting the safelight was at fault, although I have used one for at least 28 years with no problems. I carried out a strip test where I exposed a piece of printing paper where I exposed strips of the paper for up to 50 seconds in 10 second steps. It was developed (45s) stop bath (15s) followed by bleach fix (45s) and only on the last strip was there any visible change of colour. Even that was not so much cyan, but just a very faint darkening from the white paper which was of course the 50second step.
I have timed my process from taking the paper out of the box, exposing it under the enlarger, then to putting it into the processor and with a total time of 35s. My average exposure under the enlarger is around 15s using 35mm or 120 film. In the processor that is to all intents and purposes without any light exposure because the borders are pure white.
To try to correct the cyan cast I altered the filtration by adding Yellow and Magenta and even by as little as 5-10units (Kodak values and I never use the Cyan filtration) it just flips to the opposite colour cast. There does not seem to be a happy medium. I have even changed the paper from the one I have been using, to a new box of Fuji with a completely different batch number and that does not make any noticeable difference.
When printing B&W I use the same enlarger and the magenta and yellow filters to change the grades and there is never problem.
