mcgrattan
Member
HI,
I'm new here so bear with me...
I've been experimenting with stand development in Rodinal and just processed my first roll of 120 this way [I've only been doing 35mm before as I didn't have a universal tank]...
Maco UP25 - Developed at 1:200 for 90 minutes. Agitated for the first minute and then given a couple of gentle inversions about half way through.
The negatives look pretty good -- really sharp, maybe a little thick. Superficially, through a loupe, they look the nicest I've done so far.
However, when I tried scanning them, the results weren't as good as the thin looking, underdeveloped and rather flat 35mm negs I did the same day [in Calbe A49] which looked pretty good after some level adjustments to brighten them up a little.
The stand developed 120 negs scan with too much contrast and not enough mid tones.
Any tips for developing with scanning in mind? I had tried stand development as I thought it would reduce contrast -- rather than expand it.
I don't have facilities to make my own prints at the moment.
I'm new here so bear with me...
I've been experimenting with stand development in Rodinal and just processed my first roll of 120 this way [I've only been doing 35mm before as I didn't have a universal tank]...
Maco UP25 - Developed at 1:200 for 90 minutes. Agitated for the first minute and then given a couple of gentle inversions about half way through.
The negatives look pretty good -- really sharp, maybe a little thick. Superficially, through a loupe, they look the nicest I've done so far.
However, when I tried scanning them, the results weren't as good as the thin looking, underdeveloped and rather flat 35mm negs I did the same day [in Calbe A49] which looked pretty good after some level adjustments to brighten them up a little.
The stand developed 120 negs scan with too much contrast and not enough mid tones.
Any tips for developing with scanning in mind? I had tried stand development as I thought it would reduce contrast -- rather than expand it.
I don't have facilities to make my own prints at the moment.