- Joined
- Mar 31, 2014
- Messages
- 399
- Format
- 35mm
As the title said. Went out shooting yesterday. Developed 4 rolls of HP5+ in XTOL 1+1 at 20 degrees celcius. 120 rolls with a Rolleiflex MX-evs. They came out PERFECT.
However both rolls of 135 are way denser then my Rolleiflex shots? It was a model shoot, same building, same lightmeter, same developer tank... and yet such a difference. They are hard to scan (didn't have time for darkroom).
The 135 were both shot with a Nikon F3P. I recently switched from HC110 to XTOL.. so I'm really hoping that XTOL isn't the problem here. Cause other rolls with XTOL look fine, as were the Rolleiflex shots.
So I'm thinking that the shutter speeds aren't accurate from the F3P and overexpose the negative. But... I've found pictures taken with the F3P that doesn't have this problem as big as yesterday (Only have shot 5 rolls with the F3P so far - 2 of them yesterday).
So what could be the problem? I'm going to shoot with another Nikon body tomorrow, which has correct shutter speeds, develop the same in XTOL and see how they turn out. Let's say the shutter speeds from the F3P are correct too. What else could be the problem? That I develop for too long and that my Rolleiflex just in a miraculous way underexpose the neg - making better negs? Rollei has been serviced 2 months ago.. so I don't think it as a suspect.
I've been breaking my head around this - can't sleep from it.
Sidenote: I switched to XTOL because I lacked shadow detail and also had to print at grade 3-4-5 constantly with HC110.. I could have increased the time yes. But I wanted to try XTOL. My negs got denser and I was able to print at grade 2. But now they are too dense... And don't know which one to suspect. XTOL or Nikon F3P. XTOL seems odd since the Rolleiflex shots are okay ...
Update: Did a second roll with another body. Again dense negatives. So it's not a faulty shutter. Click here to read about the second roll. (there was a url link here which no longer exists)
Thanks
However both rolls of 135 are way denser then my Rolleiflex shots? It was a model shoot, same building, same lightmeter, same developer tank... and yet such a difference. They are hard to scan (didn't have time for darkroom).
The 135 were both shot with a Nikon F3P. I recently switched from HC110 to XTOL.. so I'm really hoping that XTOL isn't the problem here. Cause other rolls with XTOL look fine, as were the Rolleiflex shots.
So I'm thinking that the shutter speeds aren't accurate from the F3P and overexpose the negative. But... I've found pictures taken with the F3P that doesn't have this problem as big as yesterday (Only have shot 5 rolls with the F3P so far - 2 of them yesterday).
So what could be the problem? I'm going to shoot with another Nikon body tomorrow, which has correct shutter speeds, develop the same in XTOL and see how they turn out. Let's say the shutter speeds from the F3P are correct too. What else could be the problem? That I develop for too long and that my Rolleiflex just in a miraculous way underexpose the neg - making better negs? Rollei has been serviced 2 months ago.. so I don't think it as a suspect.
I've been breaking my head around this - can't sleep from it.
Sidenote: I switched to XTOL because I lacked shadow detail and also had to print at grade 3-4-5 constantly with HC110.. I could have increased the time yes. But I wanted to try XTOL. My negs got denser and I was able to print at grade 2. But now they are too dense... And don't know which one to suspect. XTOL or Nikon F3P. XTOL seems odd since the Rolleiflex shots are okay ...
Update: Did a second roll with another body. Again dense negatives. So it's not a faulty shutter. Click here to read about the second roll. (there was a url link here which no longer exists)
Thanks
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I don't use flashes.