smiba
Member
Hey everyone,
Developed my first 35mm film in C41 this weekend, this was a one year expired Fujicolor Superia 200 kept at room temperature.
I shot with an older film for this because I didn't want to risk making excellent pictures and then ruining the development of it. (Its a learning process after all)
Also its important to know, I shot this film at ISO 400 by mistake and compensated for this by running -1 stop in the development process.
I'd say for a first time, they don't look too bad. But there is lots to be improved.
Link to the .DNG (RAW scan) and processed .jpg (Lightroom + Photoshop for dust touchups) can be found here:
Download: https://owncloud.bartstuff.eu/index.php/s/3Eyt45B5Ywy6dcj
I've questions about the following things related to the processing of the film:
- The picture has high grain, what caused this and can I prevent it?
- The negative has a strong offset to red and a fair bit to green, what did I do wrong? Possibly I didn't agitate the fixer enough?
- When loading the film for development, I did this with bare/unprotected hands because it gives me a better feeling if I'm doing it correct. Would it be recommended to wear lint-free gloves? Do the oils on my fingers pose a realistic risk to the development?
Some after-development questions:
- The picture suffers from lots of little white spots, some of this is dust but some of it just won't come off with a little bit of air or 99% isopropyl. What did I do wrong when drying or storing the film? (This is a after-developement issue right? Or also a chemical issue?)
- When cleaning films, what is recommended? How sensitive is the film to damage actually?
Thanks!
Developed my first 35mm film in C41 this weekend, this was a one year expired Fujicolor Superia 200 kept at room temperature.
I shot with an older film for this because I didn't want to risk making excellent pictures and then ruining the development of it. (Its a learning process after all)
Also its important to know, I shot this film at ISO 400 by mistake and compensated for this by running -1 stop in the development process.
I'd say for a first time, they don't look too bad. But there is lots to be improved.
Link to the .DNG (RAW scan) and processed .jpg (Lightroom + Photoshop for dust touchups) can be found here:
Download: https://owncloud.bartstuff.eu/index.php/s/3Eyt45B5Ywy6dcj
I've questions about the following things related to the processing of the film:
- The picture has high grain, what caused this and can I prevent it?
- The negative has a strong offset to red and a fair bit to green, what did I do wrong? Possibly I didn't agitate the fixer enough?
- When loading the film for development, I did this with bare/unprotected hands because it gives me a better feeling if I'm doing it correct. Would it be recommended to wear lint-free gloves? Do the oils on my fingers pose a realistic risk to the development?
Some after-development questions:
- The picture suffers from lots of little white spots, some of this is dust but some of it just won't come off with a little bit of air or 99% isopropyl. What did I do wrong when drying or storing the film? (This is a after-developement issue right? Or also a chemical issue?)
- When cleaning films, what is recommended? How sensitive is the film to damage actually?
Thanks!