avizzini
Member
I've noticed on a recently developed roll of film that black spots were appearing all over each of the photos. I noticed it after developing and scanning a roll of TMAX 400 but, looking back at previously scanned rolls of film (mostly Delta 400) I might be seeing the same issue albeit much fainter and less apparent.
Photo 1 (TMAX 400 @ 400 iso) - The worst of the rolls, perhaps due to the fact this roll had more contrast. It's all over but the sky is the easiest area to spot (enlarge the image).
Photo 2 (Delta 400 @ 400 iso) - Not as bad... but it does look like something is there... Lower contrast negative. Most apparent in the upper left corner (enlarge the image).
Photo 3 (Delta 400 @ 400 iso) - Not too bad, maybe it's not even the same thing and its just normal grain/scan effects? Lower contrast negative... The darker parts of the sky might be the area affected (enlarge the image).
The 3 photos come from 3 different rolls of film developed the same way using the same fixer and developer concentrate from the same bottle. The fixer (TF-4) and developer (DD-X) are relatively fresh (within the past month or two). The LFN Wetting Agent I use in the final rinse is about 1 year old, is that problematic?
General development method:
1) 100ml DD-X + 400ml of distilled water at 20c poured into the tank. Developed for 8 mins with 4 rotations of the tank each minute, tapping the tank to remove air bubbles, then emptied.
2) 2 mins of running tap water at ~20c (not exact give or take a few degrees) as a stop. Then, filled the tank twice with tap water and agitated for 30 seconds, then emptied.
3) Poured in 500ml of the TF-4 fixer (mixed with liquid concentrate and distilled water, working solution previously used < 10 times). Rotated tank 2 times every 15 seconds for 6 mins, tapping the tank each time to remove air bubbles, then emptied.
4) Ran tap water at ~20c for 5 minutes as a rinse, then emptied.
5) Poured in 500ml of distilled water + 2-3 drops of LFN wetting agent, agitated for 30 seconds as a final rinse.
6) Removed film from tank, shook off excess water, and hung to dry. I did not squeegee or touch the film, only air dried. They were hung in a bathroom where I recently ran hot water to steam the air and remove dust.
7) Rinse out the tank and dry everything before moving onto a new roll.
I've developed over 50 rolls of film using this same method and same types of chemicals and it appears to only be a recent problem...
The chemicals are stored in my apartment that can reach 80f+ in the day time (I doubt this was a problem since I don't see it in rolls I developed last summer when it was hot). When I'm preparing the chemicals to use I will cool them down in a measured/mixed amount in the refrigerator to bring them to 20c (otherwise they're several degrees too warm).
I assume it has to be the chemicals... my tap water hasn't changed and I use distilled water for dev, fix, and final rinse. This is most apparent with the roll of TMAX but it appears somewhat in the Delta 400 (maybe ?).
Should I dump my fixer?
Was it my developer? (the bottle of concentrate is nearly empty, so I can dump the rest without much waste)
Is the 1 year old LFN wetting agent to blame?
Bad distilled water, if even possible?
I'm not opposed to just dumping all my chemicals and starting fresh, I just would want to know if it's something I'm doing that could cause this to happen again in the future...
Photo 1 (TMAX 400 @ 400 iso) - The worst of the rolls, perhaps due to the fact this roll had more contrast. It's all over but the sky is the easiest area to spot (enlarge the image).

Photo 2 (Delta 400 @ 400 iso) - Not as bad... but it does look like something is there... Lower contrast negative. Most apparent in the upper left corner (enlarge the image).

Photo 3 (Delta 400 @ 400 iso) - Not too bad, maybe it's not even the same thing and its just normal grain/scan effects? Lower contrast negative... The darker parts of the sky might be the area affected (enlarge the image).

The 3 photos come from 3 different rolls of film developed the same way using the same fixer and developer concentrate from the same bottle. The fixer (TF-4) and developer (DD-X) are relatively fresh (within the past month or two). The LFN Wetting Agent I use in the final rinse is about 1 year old, is that problematic?
General development method:
1) 100ml DD-X + 400ml of distilled water at 20c poured into the tank. Developed for 8 mins with 4 rotations of the tank each minute, tapping the tank to remove air bubbles, then emptied.
2) 2 mins of running tap water at ~20c (not exact give or take a few degrees) as a stop. Then, filled the tank twice with tap water and agitated for 30 seconds, then emptied.
3) Poured in 500ml of the TF-4 fixer (mixed with liquid concentrate and distilled water, working solution previously used < 10 times). Rotated tank 2 times every 15 seconds for 6 mins, tapping the tank each time to remove air bubbles, then emptied.
4) Ran tap water at ~20c for 5 minutes as a rinse, then emptied.
5) Poured in 500ml of distilled water + 2-3 drops of LFN wetting agent, agitated for 30 seconds as a final rinse.
6) Removed film from tank, shook off excess water, and hung to dry. I did not squeegee or touch the film, only air dried. They were hung in a bathroom where I recently ran hot water to steam the air and remove dust.
7) Rinse out the tank and dry everything before moving onto a new roll.
I've developed over 50 rolls of film using this same method and same types of chemicals and it appears to only be a recent problem...
The chemicals are stored in my apartment that can reach 80f+ in the day time (I doubt this was a problem since I don't see it in rolls I developed last summer when it was hot). When I'm preparing the chemicals to use I will cool them down in a measured/mixed amount in the refrigerator to bring them to 20c (otherwise they're several degrees too warm).
I assume it has to be the chemicals... my tap water hasn't changed and I use distilled water for dev, fix, and final rinse. This is most apparent with the roll of TMAX but it appears somewhat in the Delta 400 (maybe ?).
Should I dump my fixer?
Was it my developer? (the bottle of concentrate is nearly empty, so I can dump the rest without much waste)
Is the 1 year old LFN wetting agent to blame?
Bad distilled water, if even possible?
I'm not opposed to just dumping all my chemicals and starting fresh, I just would want to know if it's something I'm doing that could cause this to happen again in the future...