The edge printing on negatives isn't a particularly reliable measure of development. I'm not sure why, but the density seems to vary considerably.
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I was told, years ago, that the edge printing density for each emulsion batch is a standard for each batch and which is supplied to photofinishing labs. As such, (and if true) I guess it would be a rough guide.
Weak rebate numbers may be a sign, but they don't have to be. A proper film test will tell all, but without changing your development scheme, check the following:
1. Put a scene together from deep black to bright white (black felt, gray card, white cloth).
2. Evenly illuminate it, measure it with an incident meter (or on the gray card) and take a picture of it.
3. Develop normally, expose the paper for the shadows to be right while printing on a grade-2 paper.
Skip step 1 & 2 if your negatives already picture such a scene. Now, ask yourself, are the highlights gray (underdeveloped film), too bright (overdeveloped film) or just right?
By the way, I made myself a Zone Cube to simulate such a 'perfect' scene (picture attached).
That's a clever idea Ralph....one might easily use the "cube" to test exposure and development relatively quickly when contemplating the use of a "new" film. Do you have the design of the Zone Cube in your new book?
Ed
Weak rebate numbers may be a sign, but they don't have to be. A proper film test will tell all, but without changing your development scheme, check the following:
1. Put a scene together from deep black to bright white (black felt, gray card, white cloth).
2. Evenly illuminate it, measure it with an incident meter (or on the gray card) and take a picture of it.
3. Develop normally, expose the paper for the shadows to be right while printing on a grade-2 paper.
Skip step 1 & 2 if your negatives already picture such a scene. Now, ask yourself, are the highlights gray (underdeveloped film), too bright (overdeveloped film) or just right?
By the way, I made myself a Zone Cube to simulate such a 'perfect' scene (picture attached).
Yesterday I have a professional film photographer look at some of my negatives and he immediately said they were under developed. The printing in the margins was still gray opposed to being black./QUOTE]
Congratulations, you met The Human Densitometer. Sadly, having a guy look at the negs is totally unreliable.
I just read the little arrows on some Kodak film that was processed today. TMX= .15, TMY2= .40. Is that bad ?
The image is perfectly developed. Maybe there isn't a correlation between the marginal numbers and the image development ?
Without seeing your image, it is impossible to judge what is going wrong. Based on published curves, and my own experience with Xtol and Neopan 400, you can do everything right and still get gray negs. The shoulder at 1.2 or so means that if you have over exposed the film by a small amount you've pushed the highlights into a part of the negative that is trying desperately to compress what you want to expand.
Neopan and Xtol. Barry, it's kind like trying to build a fiddle out of cardboard instead of maple.
I like that cube, Ralph. Is that an original idea? If so... pretty brilliant!!
... if development is significantly off, an experienced eye using a good loupe should be able to note the problem. Matt
As far as development goes, what really matters is whether your highlights have enough density to print or scan the way you want.
That is assuming you have well exposed images. With enough exposure to give you the detail you need in shadow, you have a good start. Too little information in shadows tells you you are probably underexposed. If your shadows are right, then highlight printability tells you how appropriate your development is. Overexposure will give you negs that are heavy everywhere.
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