TonyB65
Member
I used the Bellini kit and had a quick 30 second wash step after bleach and after fix and didn't have any issues at all. I also did full tank inversions instead of the "twiddle" method.
Well, firstly, it was just one batch of 3 films, I got decent looking results, and all was good. Unfortunately good buggered off and was replaced by increasingly sketchy...Wow the pendulum has certainly swung a long way to the other side! You must do what you feel will solve the problem and if that is the Digibase Kit then fine. However I am curious, as I think you must be, why the problem is random frames only and secondly why your first report less than a month ago, was largely one of success, especially with the in-date quality film of Ektar.
The bleach bath in this kit seems to act very differently from the Digibase (and from the Tetenal kit AFAICR) because this one doesn't build up any pressure in the tank as it's working. I find that unless I vent the cap of my Nikor tank, it can pop off after agitation. (I use PVC tape to seal around the lid and sometimes it even seeps through that) As for the 45 second step, more of a minor annoyance than anything else really, possibly a factor of this kit being designed to be used in a minilab.Unless the Bellini bleach acts quite differently then I do wonder what problems can arise if the bleach is given longer than 45 secs. Bellini seem to have only succeeded in frustrating you, understandably so, in trying to do a step in 45 seconds
Which is why I've posted the follow-up. Hopefully we might get a few guesses as to why it's not happening to every frame of the film which may be of help to others using this kit. Like I said, the only thing that has changed in my process is the soup!I cannot get rid of a feeling that the problems with some of your latest film frames may have other than the Bellini kit as the cause.
It does. Your points 1&2 are clear and easy to follow and as either works fine then that's all users need to know Just a pity that the Bellini instructions still leave something to be desired and I agree totally with what you say about agitation in the "why risk it ?" sense when stabiliser struck me as the sort of liquid that does its job perfectly well with just a straight dunkYes, you do need to wash after the fixer. This can be done in either of two ways:
1. Use the Bellini Stabiliser as a wash/stabiliser making sure that the solution is discarded after each wash OR
2. Wash with water after the Fix then dunk for 30 seconds in the Bellini stabiliser solution after the water wash. Do not rinse with water (distilled or not) after this step.
These are the instructions from Bellini although perhaps not very usefully translated on their latest instruction sheet.
I use method 2 washing with the water according to the Ilford technique. I'd suggest that the final rinse with stabiliser is a dunk without agitation. This is where the instructions are far from clear as they state 3 minutes with constant agitation. If you do that, you are likely to get substantial water spotting and streaking on the negatives.
Hope this helps
I'd suggest that the final rinse with stabiliser is a dunk without agitation. This is where the instructions are far from clear as they state 3 minutes with constant agitation. If you do that, you are likely to get substantial water spotting and streaking on the negatives.
I use method 2 washing with the water according to the Ilford technique. I'd suggest that the final rinse with stabiliser is a dunk without agitation. This is where the instructions are far from clear as they state 3 minutes with constant agitation. If you do that, you are likely to get substantial water spotting and streaking on the negatives.
I don't see the connection between agitation of the final rinse/stabilizer and drying marks, to be honest.
In general, agitation is a good idea. In the specific case of a stabilizer, it's likely sort of OK to allow diffusion to do its work, in which case you may consider lengthening the final rinse to 3-5 minutes or so. However, I'd recommend agitating. You want to actually replace the water in the emulsion with water containing the stabilizer. Agitation greatly helps this process.
A 3 minute stabilizer with agitation seems wrong
As always, "do what works best for you", regardless of the why & whatIt's not critical either way. If you look into what a stabilizer is/does, you'll notice that in principle it doesn't matter whether you treat the film with it for 30 seconds or 3 hours. It's fine as long as the liquid gets a chance to diffuse into the gelatin emulsion. How come you ran into problems with drying marks I couldn't say, but I expect there's an additional uncontrolled/confounding factor at work.
As always, "do what works best for you", regardless of the why & what.
I added a thorough wash after the fix and dunked in stabilizer for 30 seconds. Thereafter perfect results with the remaining 11 rolls so honestly I do not know whether the wash or the shorter stabilizer time were the factors which gave the improvement.
I suspect they are also saying that the final wash can in fact be done by using the stabilizer solution.
I recall reading the Bellini instructions as well and I agree that is the way I think they read or should I say that was what I felt Bellini were saying from what I read but maybe the proof reading done on the translation may not have conveyed what is the better advice, namely what koraks has said about a wash then the stabiliser being the safer procedureAs always, "do what works best for you", regardless of the why & what
I suspect they are also saying that the final wash can in fact be done by using the stabilizer solution. Hence perhaps the 3 minute requirement.
Ah, there we go. So I understand previously you didn't wash the film between fixer and stabilizer? Because that will definitely result in major problems. The only use-case in which a wash is omitted after fixer is in the case of minilabs where rollers or doctor blades remove virtually all of the processing liquids at the end of each bath (so also fixer). In a home setting, there will always be a significant amount of chemistry carried over to the next step. If you didn't wash between fixer and stabilizer, this means you've been introducing significant amounts of fixer into your stabilizer. The fixer and fixer-silver compounds will then dry on the surface of the film, causing problems.
ALWAYS wash your film, ALWAYS, ALWAYS.
NO NO NO NO NO!
Stabilizer is NOT a wash!!!!
PS: it would be a good idea to re-wash the negatives that you didn't wash properly and went from fix straight into stab. Wash them thoroughly, then run through stabilizer again.
It's also a good idea to dump the stabilizer that has been contaminated with fixer and mix some fresh stabilizer.
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