Thomas Bertilsson
Member
I would have loved to continue using Fuji Acros, but I cannot get it in sheet film for a reasonable price, and I want the same film for 35mm, MF, and LF.
Mind you, that's the only reason. I love the range of Acros, but I have had negatives with blown out highlights more than once due to careless development. I second the notion of John Simmons that generous exposure in the shadows is necessary to get an easily printable negative. I developed in Rodinal 1+100 for 12 minutes with agitation every minute at 68*F and got very helpful negatives.
One scene was of a dark tree with bark details in the shadows, with a brightly lit landscape in the background. I gave a lot of exposure to render detail in the foreground bark, and held back development a little, and got a negative that printed with a full range of detail from sky in the background to bark in the foreground shade on a grade 2 paper.
I think the film development in this case is a do-over. I think gainer's advice sounds reasonable. Bracket the exposures until the shadow detail looks right, then adjust development time until the highlights look good. It's a capable film, no doubt about it.
- Thomas
Mind you, that's the only reason. I love the range of Acros, but I have had negatives with blown out highlights more than once due to careless development. I second the notion of John Simmons that generous exposure in the shadows is necessary to get an easily printable negative. I developed in Rodinal 1+100 for 12 minutes with agitation every minute at 68*F and got very helpful negatives.
One scene was of a dark tree with bark details in the shadows, with a brightly lit landscape in the background. I gave a lot of exposure to render detail in the foreground bark, and held back development a little, and got a negative that printed with a full range of detail from sky in the background to bark in the foreground shade on a grade 2 paper.
I think the film development in this case is a do-over. I think gainer's advice sounds reasonable. Bracket the exposures until the shadow detail looks right, then adjust development time until the highlights look good. It's a capable film, no doubt about it.
- Thomas