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- Jan 22, 2009
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Hi Everyone,
I've been doing my own b&w film developing and printing for four years now. One thing I never could completely understand is when a developer is described as "speed increasing " or that it will work at the expense of film speed. Now then here in a nutshell is what I have learned either by experience or in the classroom or by reading forums such as apug:
1) Most film iso's are arrived at by the manufacturer under controlled tests and are often more optimistic (i.e. higher) then their ideal iso in the real world. This is why it seems many photographers rate their film at half the iso or more. I often do as well. One of my teachers used to say "No amount of darkroom work will put detail in a print if the detail isn't on the negative". So goes the old rule of thumb - expose for the shadows, develop for the highlights.
2) During development, the thin, shadow areas get developed first. After about half way through the development time, these areas are developed as much as they can be. Any detail not present in the shadows simply means not enough exposure was given to the film. Meanwhile, the highlights keep building up and will continue to do until the developer is dumped and stop bath introduced.
So here's where I get confused. Why would a particular developer be said to give a film it's box speed while another is said to increase speed and yet another will rob a film of speed. I thought film speed was strictly related to exposure. It seems to me that this must refer to highlight detail since the longer development is carried out, the denser the highlights get until detail is lost. I have a copy of The Darkroom Cookbook and if I recall correctly, high acutance developers decrease speed. Rodinal is my most used developer (followed in order by HC-110 and Clayton F-76) and back when I was a beginner I would always expose my film at the box speeds. Sure I got some muddy shadow areas but that improved when I started over exposing a stop. Am I correct in thinking that another developer will yield similar detail at box speed then Rodinal?
I really appreciate any info anyone can give. Please keep in mind that I'm not too familiar with the more technical aspects of film and development. I've heard of shoulders and curves to describe film and development, but really don't know what they mean nor do I use the Zone System.
Thanks,
Marc
I've been doing my own b&w film developing and printing for four years now. One thing I never could completely understand is when a developer is described as "speed increasing " or that it will work at the expense of film speed. Now then here in a nutshell is what I have learned either by experience or in the classroom or by reading forums such as apug:
1) Most film iso's are arrived at by the manufacturer under controlled tests and are often more optimistic (i.e. higher) then their ideal iso in the real world. This is why it seems many photographers rate their film at half the iso or more. I often do as well. One of my teachers used to say "No amount of darkroom work will put detail in a print if the detail isn't on the negative". So goes the old rule of thumb - expose for the shadows, develop for the highlights.
2) During development, the thin, shadow areas get developed first. After about half way through the development time, these areas are developed as much as they can be. Any detail not present in the shadows simply means not enough exposure was given to the film. Meanwhile, the highlights keep building up and will continue to do until the developer is dumped and stop bath introduced.
So here's where I get confused. Why would a particular developer be said to give a film it's box speed while another is said to increase speed and yet another will rob a film of speed. I thought film speed was strictly related to exposure. It seems to me that this must refer to highlight detail since the longer development is carried out, the denser the highlights get until detail is lost. I have a copy of The Darkroom Cookbook and if I recall correctly, high acutance developers decrease speed. Rodinal is my most used developer (followed in order by HC-110 and Clayton F-76) and back when I was a beginner I would always expose my film at the box speeds. Sure I got some muddy shadow areas but that improved when I started over exposing a stop. Am I correct in thinking that another developer will yield similar detail at box speed then Rodinal?
I really appreciate any info anyone can give. Please keep in mind that I'm not too familiar with the more technical aspects of film and development. I've heard of shoulders and curves to describe film and development, but really don't know what they mean nor do I use the Zone System.
Thanks,
Marc

