bonk
Member
- Joined
- Mar 31, 2007
- Messages
- 214
- Format
- Med. Format Pan
I just started my own little darkroom and now I am a bit daunted. I heared that it is best if I'd always stick with the same film and developer. But how do I find the right combination for my needs. The possibilities seem to be endless. There are so many b&w films and so many chemicals out there. How am I to find the the optimal combination that give me what I want? I can't possibly try them all.
Are there any "usual suspects" that work especially well?
I suppose the film and chemicals to choose depend a lot on what kind of "look and feel" I am after in my photos. Maybe I can benefit from your experience and if I'd tell what I am after you can tell me one or the other shortcut on the way to my perfect combination. Maybe there is something that I really should try and maybe there is something that I shouldn't bother trying.
I mainly shoot b&w using my Pentax 67. I like photos with great details/sharpness and great tonality (wide/details range of graytones). Recent photos of APUG memebers that sort of represents (from a technical point of view) what I am after and that imressed me are for example the following:
"Tuscan Trees" by Early Riser:
"Contry Road" by John Simmons:
"shammy is happy" by Bertus:
"Copenhagen Central" by dlridings:
I am not sure what exactly it is that makes those images look good
They all apear to me with great sharpness/contrast and detailes gray shades. Sorry if that sounds noobish. But I am sure I have taken similar pictures but when enlarged they are missing something. Look for example this one I did:
"At the elbe" by me:
I find it somehow misses what the others have. Maybe its sharpness maybe it's something else. I am not sure. But I think the right darkroom techniques have a big impact.
Any tips on where to go from here are very welcome. Now that you might have an idea of what I desire maybe you have a suggestion for me what developer / film I should start out with?
Are there any "usual suspects" that work especially well?
I suppose the film and chemicals to choose depend a lot on what kind of "look and feel" I am after in my photos. Maybe I can benefit from your experience and if I'd tell what I am after you can tell me one or the other shortcut on the way to my perfect combination. Maybe there is something that I really should try and maybe there is something that I shouldn't bother trying.
I mainly shoot b&w using my Pentax 67. I like photos with great details/sharpness and great tonality (wide/details range of graytones). Recent photos of APUG memebers that sort of represents (from a technical point of view) what I am after and that imressed me are for example the following:
"Tuscan Trees" by Early Riser:

"Contry Road" by John Simmons:

"shammy is happy" by Bertus:

"Copenhagen Central" by dlridings:

I am not sure what exactly it is that makes those images look good

"At the elbe" by me:

I find it somehow misses what the others have. Maybe its sharpness maybe it's something else. I am not sure. But I think the right darkroom techniques have a big impact.
Any tips on where to go from here are very welcome. Now that you might have an idea of what I desire maybe you have a suggestion for me what developer / film I should start out with?