whojammyflip
Subscriber
I'm a relative newbie, so I muck about with different films to see what they can do. I have particularly liked the look of TMAX so far, and picked up a batch of Delta as its apparently similar but slightly different. I was incredibly suprised when measuring the contrast index for my 135 TMAX 400 that it was significantly lower than recommended, even though I have been fastidious with control of development previously. I'm now developing it for something like 10 minutes at 22 deg C.
I could see the advantage of trying to perfect the settings for a single film, but you may have just found a "local minima". I guess my approach could be likened to simulated annealing: jumping round films and then attempting to get good in the one you are presently using, only to heat things up and jump again at a later date. There needs to be some form of stopping criterion I guess.
I could see the advantage of trying to perfect the settings for a single film, but you may have just found a "local minima". I guess my approach could be likened to simulated annealing: jumping round films and then attempting to get good in the one you are presently using, only to heat things up and jump again at a later date. There needs to be some form of stopping criterion I guess.





