Hi all,
Very new to shooting film and getting into developing B&W at home.
I've shot a few rolls of various kinds (HP5, Kentmere 400, TriX, TMAX, Delta 400) and trying to see which I like the best.
Although I've noticed significantly different grain "character" from each film, all are consistently grainier than expected. To be more specific, I believe there is a higher contrast within the grain than I have seen in other people's samples, independent of clumping/density (TMAX and Delta are quite velvety, whereas I've noticed more grouping in the Kentmere/HP5).
I'm wondering if this is a result of the temperature used to develop. I am developing consistently at 24C (my bathroom's ambient temp, where all my material is stored), measured with a thermometer immediately before development.
I've heard a lot of heresay but haven't seen any scientific measurements of temperature's effects on grain pronouncement (same image, same film, same developer, different temperatures).
Does anyone have a link or reference to that kind of a resource? Very curious.
Thanks!
Very new to shooting film and getting into developing B&W at home.
I've shot a few rolls of various kinds (HP5, Kentmere 400, TriX, TMAX, Delta 400) and trying to see which I like the best.
Although I've noticed significantly different grain "character" from each film, all are consistently grainier than expected. To be more specific, I believe there is a higher contrast within the grain than I have seen in other people's samples, independent of clumping/density (TMAX and Delta are quite velvety, whereas I've noticed more grouping in the Kentmere/HP5).
I'm wondering if this is a result of the temperature used to develop. I am developing consistently at 24C (my bathroom's ambient temp, where all my material is stored), measured with a thermometer immediately before development.
I've heard a lot of heresay but haven't seen any scientific measurements of temperature's effects on grain pronouncement (same image, same film, same developer, different temperatures).
Does anyone have a link or reference to that kind of a resource? Very curious.
Thanks!

