First ever contact print

Horizon, summer rain

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Horizon, summer rain

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$12.66

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$12.66

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A street portrait

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A street portrait

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A street portrait

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A street portrait

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img746.jpg

img746.jpg

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LucRoMar

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Jun 21, 2012
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43
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35mm
Hello,

I would love to have some feedback on this 2 parts contact sheet.
This is a lot of new things for me :

First time shooting medium format (6x45)
First time dev @home (Ilford delta 3200 in D-76 for 13 min. with agitation every 30 s)
first time contact printing.

These are raw scan, only resized.

I would reall enjoy any advices on the contacts and on the result of the dev too.

From the little experience I have, I would say I underexpose most of the shots by 1-1,5 stops.

Thanks,

002_ps.jpg 001_ps.jpg
 

mrred

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Joined
Mar 8, 2009
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Location
Montreal, Ca
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I would say you are well on your way to enabling a wonderful addiction. Welcome aboard!
 

EASmithV

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Joined
Aug 22, 2008
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1,984
Location
Virginia
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Large Format
way better than my first contact sheet
 
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LucRoMar

Member
Joined
Jun 21, 2012
Messages
43
Format
35mm
Thank you for the positive feedback, I was really feeling bad with this as I would love to move my carreer from desk job to Children/familly portrait photograpy using film.Maybe as part time activity.
 

MartinP

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Joined
Jun 23, 2007
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1,569
Location
Netherlands
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Medium Format
The first results are always fun :smile: I wonder what EI you used on the film? The contacts do look rather underexposed, as you say.

D76 is pretty much the same as ID11 (the Ilford version of the same developer type) and for that developer the 13m time is for an EI of 6400. To get attractive results at that rating you might be better using one of the Ilford recommended developers - either DDX (a liquid concentrate) or Microphen (mixed to a stock solution from a powder) which are both 'speed-increasing', in comparison to D76/ID11. Even then, try rating at EI3200 and using the development time for 6400.

The films actual ISO speed is around 1200 but it is designed to have a very flat curve, allowing over-development to increase contrast and give a 'normal' looking result at higher EI's (in other words, it is made to be pushed). A lot will depend on exactly how you meter the scene as variations can easily give you a stop more, or less, of light going on to the film. For portrait work this might not be a conventional choice of film, to say the least.
 
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LucRoMar

Member
Joined
Jun 21, 2012
Messages
43
Format
35mm
Thank you Martin,
Yes it is fun but quite expensive too, I still have to sort out ventilation in the darkroom, find an enlarger for MF (either bw/color), sort out my exposure method...

On the creative side, I mostly don't even seems to know what I'm doing and/or if I am doing it correctly.

Thanks for the advice regarding Delta, I used it because we don't get that much light at the moment ;-) and testing different film is part of the fun too, I4ll try T-Max 400 soon and will see for alternative dev.
 
Joined
Dec 10, 2009
Messages
6,297
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Congrats! Looks better than my first contact sheet. What I suggest is maybe developing your film a bit longer and printing your contact sheets with more contrast. There's a beauty of contact printing that enlarged printing can't match. I've heard that Ed Weston did a lot of contact printing. All he used was just a light bulb as his light source.
 

LFman

Member
Joined
Nov 6, 2011
Messages
42
Format
Large Format
I just did my first printing session ever last week... it was contact printing as well. I printed an 8x10 contact print of a single 8x10 neg using a lamp. I wasted about 10 sheets thinking my paper pack had been exposed to light and it all came out black... until I discovered that my tiny lamp had way much more wattage than I expected!

I can't wait until I have all my testing done, some bigger trays, and some nice, big paper :smile: Addiction (and poverty), here I come!
 
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