k2adir
Member
Years ago I found one blog posts where the writer was suggesting a different way of developing.
I do not remember it word for word but it was something like this
He was using 400 iso film and he rated it less than 100 iso. I believe he was overexposing it by 6 to 7 stops.
after that, he develops the film using different times (Which I do not remember anymore) and his results have a very well balanced histogram.
I remember the picture he used in the article. The first photo was taken in a room, and there was a very large window. Because of his technique, he got a well-balanced negative where light from the window didn't blow up the picture and made rest of the room look too dark, and there was good detail in the room too. Chairs other things were visible.
I lost that link and I cannot find it anymore. I do not know if this method has its own name but I doubt it does not.
Do any of you have that link saved somewhere or any other resources similar to this
Or your personal experiences, I mean, anything. I'm not being picky at all.
I have done things like +4 and under dev and so on but that article was plain crazy. I wish I still had it.
thanks
I do not remember it word for word but it was something like this
He was using 400 iso film and he rated it less than 100 iso. I believe he was overexposing it by 6 to 7 stops.
after that, he develops the film using different times (Which I do not remember anymore) and his results have a very well balanced histogram.
I remember the picture he used in the article. The first photo was taken in a room, and there was a very large window. Because of his technique, he got a well-balanced negative where light from the window didn't blow up the picture and made rest of the room look too dark, and there was good detail in the room too. Chairs other things were visible.
I lost that link and I cannot find it anymore. I do not know if this method has its own name but I doubt it does not.
Do any of you have that link saved somewhere or any other resources similar to this
Or your personal experiences, I mean, anything. I'm not being picky at all.
I have done things like +4 and under dev and so on but that article was plain crazy. I wish I still had it.
thanks