Hi all,
I've been searching for a good two days now on multiple forums but can't seem to find any postings on this issue.
So, here's the problem:
My hp5 looks as though I was using a lens that didn't cover my format (5x7) and as though I under exposed around two stops.
My setup was:
-hp5 rated at 100
-pryocat hd - 20-4.5-2000; 22 degrees celcious; 15 min agitation; 12 sheets shuffled in a tray
-presoaked for two minutes
We could say the film was developed unevenly, because of the thin edges, but the photograph had water and sky in it, and in the middle of the film (middle being about 4x5 inches) the water and sky are completely smooth.
I know the lens has ample coverage (a nikkor 450m)
But, here's the kicker: after I had this same issue happen when diluted 20-3-2000 with 10 sheets, I developed 3 sheets at 20-5-2000 (just to see if the 'b' dilution was my issue)... absolutely perfect negatives that printed fine on ilford multigrade warmtone with a #2 1/2 or 3 filter. So, wanting to print on the higher grade filters, I diluted the 'b' solution from 5 to 4.5. Could half a milliliter have made such a difference? (I'm using very accurate pipettes)
I'm further confused because the negs that look vignetted and weak in the shadows actually need to be printed on grade 2 1/2 in order to get detail in the highlights and what little detail is in the shadows.
What I'm after is a thinner but full negative made on a normal sunny day that prints on grade 3 1/2 or 4.
Do I need to lower my 'a' percentage and up my 'b' percentage to get flatter negs? Is the 'b' getting exhausted b/c there's so little of it?
Any help is much appreciated.
I've been searching for a good two days now on multiple forums but can't seem to find any postings on this issue.
So, here's the problem:
My hp5 looks as though I was using a lens that didn't cover my format (5x7) and as though I under exposed around two stops.
My setup was:
-hp5 rated at 100
-pryocat hd - 20-4.5-2000; 22 degrees celcious; 15 min agitation; 12 sheets shuffled in a tray
-presoaked for two minutes
We could say the film was developed unevenly, because of the thin edges, but the photograph had water and sky in it, and in the middle of the film (middle being about 4x5 inches) the water and sky are completely smooth.
I know the lens has ample coverage (a nikkor 450m)
But, here's the kicker: after I had this same issue happen when diluted 20-3-2000 with 10 sheets, I developed 3 sheets at 20-5-2000 (just to see if the 'b' dilution was my issue)... absolutely perfect negatives that printed fine on ilford multigrade warmtone with a #2 1/2 or 3 filter. So, wanting to print on the higher grade filters, I diluted the 'b' solution from 5 to 4.5. Could half a milliliter have made such a difference? (I'm using very accurate pipettes)
I'm further confused because the negs that look vignetted and weak in the shadows actually need to be printed on grade 2 1/2 in order to get detail in the highlights and what little detail is in the shadows.
What I'm after is a thinner but full negative made on a normal sunny day that prints on grade 3 1/2 or 4.
Do I need to lower my 'a' percentage and up my 'b' percentage to get flatter negs? Is the 'b' getting exhausted b/c there's so little of it?
Any help is much appreciated.
