bedrof
Member
at this settings - HC-110 at Dilution E (1:47) @ 68 degrees F - I would develop for 9 min
Thanks for the advice/feedback. I've recently shot a test roll similar to the one you've described based on the description in this article:You can't say your negatives are underdeveloped, but you can say they're underdeveloped for a certain enlarger.
Some of them look more underexposed than others, though. But not by a wild amount.
You really need to print in the darkroom a strip of the same scene bracketing under overcast, and a strip of a scene bracketing under direct sunlight: half stops would be better than whole stops. 5 or 7 frames will be fine, or even 3 is you do whole stops.
Then, with the minimal enlarger time for reaching pure black on paper from the negatives' borders, you'll see you need -for printing- different contrast filters, depending on the type of scene contrast: all that's what lets you see if your exposure and/or development should be changed for the next roll.
I use a condenser enlarger, and some of your negatives look perfect. A few of them look a little underexposed. Harsh direct sunlight on scenes including whites and skin, will let you know if your metering/exposure and your development are in both cases good enough (not too high) as for mixing different types of contrast in the same roll.
But asking a lab to do it, won't help in any way.
This is all about the same person checking metering, exposure, development, and printing both low and high contrast scenes.
First step: see those negatives together (contact print) on silver paper when borders reach pure black with filter 3, or even better, do that with a new roll including some strong direct sunlight scenes mixed with overcast scenes, bracketing with a bit more and a bit less exposure than the exposure you consider appropriate. You can start with whole stops just to see big changes, say +2, +1, your exposure, -1 and -2.
IMO this is the first factor you should consider. I am worried about the OP not having made a wet print in the first place. You cannot judge a negative without having it printed on paper with your own specific enlarger. And it depends on your paper developer too.You can't say your negatives are underdeveloped, but you can say they're underdeveloped for a certain enlarger.
I agree! They look fine for either diffusion or condenser enlarger; maybe a tad slightly hot for condenser. They should fit on most papers without much manipulation. I don't understand why folks would want a 'thicker' neg; doesn't make sense to me. (I print with Durst condenser so thinner negs print straight without any dodging/burning and are superb).The negatives look very printable to me.
Matt makes a good point.Yry to get started with a grade 3 exposure and see how that works for you.Thanks to everyone for chiming in, really helpful responses.
Perhaps I've become used to seeing the heavier negatives from the lab I've been using so these looked thin by comparison. I think I will try a bit more development time for the next roll to bump up the density just a bit. But I'll also take @MattKing's suggestion and make a few darkroom prints from these negatives and see how that goes. Maybe thinner is better after all...
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