Pieter12
Member
In considering comment #2, I found this rather confusing set of instructions that might make sense if I had any idea what the enlarger condenser set-up looks like:
In considering comment #2, I found this rather confusing set of instructions that might make sense if I had any idea what the enlarger condenser set-up looks like:
Unfortunately, that is what I found searching the internet. It doesn't look like there is anything higher res available.Pieter12, yes, this could well be the problem. Can you make a better scan of this info?
Yes, I feel this is contributing to the long the long exposure times, or should I say rather the longer dev times..... WHat would you recommend for keeping air out?It has been a long time since I used Ilford WT paper developer so I cannot remember whether it was clear when fresh but clearly if WT is also meant to be clear then what the OP has shown us is not. It has gone the colour that I have seen in MG developer that has "aged"
Could it be that part of the reason for what seems to some of us as a long exposure time is down the fact that to some extent longer exposure might be needed to make up for partially exhausted developer. If the developer is now 3 months old and the container is now partially empty then unless steps were taken to exclude the air inside the container this may have affected it.
Just a thought
pentaxuser
1.5 minutes development does not seem unreasonable for RC paper, it is what Ilford recommends.should I say rather the longer dev times
Thanks, what you said is actually quite helpful. Upon reading what you said, something sparked a question in me..how long should I really be developing the print for....? Based on my tests I was only dev tray for 1.5 minutes (*face palm*), when in fact Ilford's recommendation is 2.5-5 minutes dev time (can even go up to 6 mins)...Go figure... You live and you learn aha. I should be able to reduced the exposure time and dev for at least 2.5 mins with decent results. The dev has been exposed to quite a bit of oxygen and hence why the colour has turned more yellow...should probably keep the bottle as air tight as possible.Two minutes seems awfully long to me. I usually expose an 11x14 in ~32 seconds (5 stops of time). That's using a Beseler 45, PH212 (150W) bulb, 50mm lens at f8, Ilford MGIV #3 filter. That is 2 stops less than the 120 seconds (7 stops) you are seeing.
I would chalk it up to a combination of factors: the paper is slower; the enlarger puts out less light; pulling the print a bit early in a slow developer - warm tone developers take a long time; a preference for dark/low key images. If each factor contributes a 1/2 stop / 40% increase in time and is not really noticeable on its own, when added together they produce a 2 stop / 400% increase in time, which is decidedly noticeable.
Regarding FB paper 1.5-3 minutes is the recommendation for Ilford Multigrade. The recommendation for Ilford Warm Tone Multigrade is 2.5- 5 minutes.1.5 minutes development does not seem unreasonable for RC paper, it is what Ilford recommends.
And warmtone papers tend to be slower, more silver chloride. You are making a 10X enlargement. Should take a while. I use minimum of 2 minutes even with RC. Longer development times usually yield a more consistent repeatable result. I don't go past 3 minutes with my old standby favorite developer, Ilford Bromophen.Regarding FB paper 1.5-3 minutes is the recommendation for Ilford Multigrade. The recommendation for Ilford Warm Tone Multigrade is 2.5- 5 minutes.
That negative isn't a negative...it's a piece of opaque plastic!
That negative isn't a negative...it's a piece of opaque plastic!
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