Certainly looks good.
What is the very dense area at the top right?
I used a level to hold the top corner flat. I have been using a 6x9 carrier to digitize my negatives but need to pull out a 4 x 5 next time. These are my first 4 x 5 images ever so I don't have a scan procedure worked out. I use my DSLR.
Doesn't look that good to me, to be honest. There's a thick (light in the positive) trail in the center running from the top into the image and thinner "clouds" on the right side. Some further troubleshooting needs to take place.
The development irregularities on in the middle and edges are due to the design of the 20th Century holder I used. The next day I switched to a mod 54 and that cured the issue. I should have mentioned that in the initial post.
Contrast wise and exposure wise this looks pretty much ok to me. It could do with a bit of extra development, depending on how you are going to print this. On my condensor enlarger a negative like this would be an easy print. At the other hand: the light looks pretty flat and a more contrasty scene might cause issues. HMM
But also: i fully agree with Koraks that the development technique needs improvement. The trail in the centre with the tear on the top of the negative and the irregular paterns to the right need addressing. How did you develop the sheet? Trays, some sort of tank or any other technique?
See answer above about the holder I used. I did use a softbox which is low contrast. I didn't even consider that, I should probably do this again with bare bulb or just a reflector. I have diffusion enlargers, do they require a different type of negative?
Possibly a little under exposed, rather than under developed as that odd white portion top right of the negative (black on the positive) looks very light (dark). But in terms of general exposure and development there's enough detail in the image to get a decent print or scan. What is the strange line down the centre? Is that something on your backdrop or is it uneven development? If the latter, then your chemicals and timing are not bad but something in your technique wasn't quite right.
Thanks , I should have mentioned the bad holder. I used a meter for my exposures and noted if the reading wasn't dead on my f stop setting. For this one it said F16 which was the setting. If it's off then I shouldn't be shooting at box speed. I'm not that advanced. I'm reading the Negative now and It mentions tests to determine the films speed but I haven't done that. I was hoping I could avoid that extra continuous extra work if it's not that significant. However Ansel states that variations can be considerable.