- Joined
- Mar 21, 2015
- Messages
- 8
- Format
- 35mm
Developed two rolls of film with PaRodinal from the formula here (in Spanish): http://www.drlux.cl/2012/01/fabricar-rodinal-casero-paracetamol.html
Basically, 15 grams of Paracetamol (15x 1gram Paracetamol tablets), 15g of Sodium Hydroxide and Water up to 250ml. I used distilled water instead of tap water.
Time was 7 minutes with, 20ºC/68F with at 1:25. Film was Argenti PanX 100.
Agitation was gentle, continuous for the first minute, then 5 seconds each 30 seconds. Used a rotating barrel tank.
I got the next results:
All of the shots have a kind of foggy thing that you can clearly see in this image in the door to the right.
A crop of that part will show you what I mean:
The first thing that came to my mind was that the PaRodinal recipe I used is wrong. That recipe is using 15 grams of NaOH instad of the 20 gr recommended in digital truth, so that may be the cause?
I can't find any other cause since everything was measured with precission equipment. Most of the photographs were correctly exposed. It is possible some of them were a bit underexposed when taking the photograph, but all of them show the same kind of foggy thing.
Also, examining the negatives with a low-power microscope, I can see a lot of detail, but the grain is noticeable.
When scanning them, my scanner allows only 8bit per color channel at 3200 and also 4800 ppp. May the 8bit color depth scans be the cause of the problem?
Here is a link to the negative just directly from the scanner (Epson DX7450, 8bit per channel at 3200 ppp): http://i.imgur.com/cyckysr.jpg (~5000x4000)
Thanks.
Basically, 15 grams of Paracetamol (15x 1gram Paracetamol tablets), 15g of Sodium Hydroxide and Water up to 250ml. I used distilled water instead of tap water.
Time was 7 minutes with, 20ºC/68F with at 1:25. Film was Argenti PanX 100.
Agitation was gentle, continuous for the first minute, then 5 seconds each 30 seconds. Used a rotating barrel tank.
I got the next results:
All of the shots have a kind of foggy thing that you can clearly see in this image in the door to the right.
A crop of that part will show you what I mean:
The first thing that came to my mind was that the PaRodinal recipe I used is wrong. That recipe is using 15 grams of NaOH instad of the 20 gr recommended in digital truth, so that may be the cause?
I can't find any other cause since everything was measured with precission equipment. Most of the photographs were correctly exposed. It is possible some of them were a bit underexposed when taking the photograph, but all of them show the same kind of foggy thing.
Also, examining the negatives with a low-power microscope, I can see a lot of detail, but the grain is noticeable.
When scanning them, my scanner allows only 8bit per color channel at 3200 and also 4800 ppp. May the 8bit color depth scans be the cause of the problem?
Here is a link to the negative just directly from the scanner (Epson DX7450, 8bit per channel at 3200 ppp): http://i.imgur.com/cyckysr.jpg (~5000x4000)
Thanks.
