tokam
Subscriber
The scans below are from a 120 roll of Tri-X, Expiry 04/2011 which I developed last night in HC-110 1:50 for 8 mins at 21 degrees C.
Next time I will probably give another 2 mins for this combination.
I didn't shoot the film and I haven't seen the camera which was used. I gave the film to a friend of my wife's who said that her husband
owned a Rolleiflex which hasn't been used for quite some time and wanted to try it out.
The flare affects 10 out the 12 frames to a lesser or greater degree. The flare is constrained to the negative area masked by the film gate
and does not affect the film rebates or the area between frames which are clear as they should be.
This would tend to rule out a light leak from the back of the camera as the rebates and inter-frame area of the film are unaffected.
Could a leaf shutter misbehave this much, say half the shutter leaves being slow to close thus producing an overexposed area on part of the film?
My other thought is that there is a light leak at the bottom front of the camera where the lens panel slides back into the camera body for focussing,
the camera may have been dropped?
As I said earlier, I haven't seen the camera and if it is indeed a Rollei TLR then it has a problem.
Has anyone encountered a similar problem with a TLR?
Next time I will probably give another 2 mins for this combination.
I didn't shoot the film and I haven't seen the camera which was used. I gave the film to a friend of my wife's who said that her husband
owned a Rolleiflex which hasn't been used for quite some time and wanted to try it out.
The flare affects 10 out the 12 frames to a lesser or greater degree. The flare is constrained to the negative area masked by the film gate
and does not affect the film rebates or the area between frames which are clear as they should be.
This would tend to rule out a light leak from the back of the camera as the rebates and inter-frame area of the film are unaffected.
Could a leaf shutter misbehave this much, say half the shutter leaves being slow to close thus producing an overexposed area on part of the film?
My other thought is that there is a light leak at the bottom front of the camera where the lens panel slides back into the camera body for focussing,
the camera may have been dropped?
As I said earlier, I haven't seen the camera and if it is indeed a Rollei TLR then it has a problem.
Has anyone encountered a similar problem with a TLR?