To hundreds of degrees C, not at room temperature.
Indeed. There's no way stannous chloride stored in a darkroom would magically fog 35mm film in the same room.
All my film would have been fogged by now if this were the case, LOL!
To hundreds of degrees C, not at room temperature.
Lastly it was my understanding that films with tabular grain need longer fixing time. 3.5min may be too short
Hey fellow forum membersHope everyone’s doing well! Newbie here; I recently shot with a Delta 400, which I pushed to 800. I developed 1+9 with Ilfosol 3 for 14 min, agitated per every minute. (Which probably may have been too much as the negatives themselves seem very dark (I’d say overdeveloped probably compared to other films I’ve done)
I am really disappointed with the results, (too grainy, overall quality, and somewhat of “wave” marks probably during development.
Can anyone more experienced notice any particular areas that I could improve for next time? Many thanks for all your time and help!
PS. I am shooting with a Praktica** MTL50, with a 50mm/1.8 Pentacon and most of the photos where shot with my teleconverter attached (Tamron MC 2x).
These images are not extremely bad.. I have seen far worse negatives from my experiementations with Delta 400. Cost was a major factor for me when i got it last year.
But I ALWAYS have results like this when i use Delta 400 on SUNNY days. Over cast days with dull, even lighting, negatives always come out "thin" looking, but i can always see through them fine.
One the actual negatives, how shiny is each side of the negative itself. Is the emulson side flat black and matte looking, like a cast iron pan or black spray paint. Or is it shiny? On my super bright day shots, the emulsion side is always super black, thick, and like black spray paint.
But on the over cast day negatives, the plastic is shiny, and the emulsion side is slightly less shiny.
Sounds like you underexpose, too, then. And perhaps overdevelop, if you get "super black" areas when the lighting is contrasty. It's definitely possible to get beautiful results from Delta 400, and it doesn't normally behave dramatically different from other films.
I have several cameras, my newest is TSL 401. The spot meter and the average meter work the same, and in a test roll i did after a battery change last week, i couldnt even tell the difference between the frames i made with each one. Whole negative, on over cast day, despite the fact that almost every frame had a different aperture and shutter speed to balance the meter out, its a constant density all the way across.
But the one i shot previous month on a really sunny day, the frames that went nuts.
Some of the frames on sunny days, ive done multiples of the same thing to test and gotten screwy results. I mean, meter directly on the beer bottle in the sunlight light, then meter on the shoe in the shade under the table holding the beer bottle. And i get same horrid results.
When i try to print them, a grade two looks like the grade 5 example of the turkey that horenstien uses in his book on photography/printing.
Your exposure meter might also have a nonlinearity issue that leads to underexposure in darker conditions.
I don't see how Delta 400 coupd be at fault.
Probably, yeah.
Look at Mrs. Bessanova's film.
I understand your reasoning, but it appears that the fogging of CT turns out to be pretty even.
The thing with CT is for it to work, you need a lot of samples, essentially. Apparently the old school x-ray equipment would just pulse the radiation source in sync with the periodic detection/sampling. It looks like CT just leaves the exposure running and then samples at high frequency to get the desired resolution.
Stannous chloride does not fume. There's in fact very little in a typical darkroom that would fume and fog, with the possible exception of the old fashioned smelly sepia toning that virtually nobody's using. And you'd have to pull some really weird tricks to get 35mm film inside a casette to fog as a result. It's not fumes, this much is safe to assume.
Probably, yeah.
Look at Mrs. Bessanova's film.
I understand your reasoning, but it appears that the fogging of CT turns out to be pretty even.
The thing with CT is for it to work, you need a lot of samples, essentially. Apparently the old school x-ray equipment would just pulse the radiation source in sync with the periodic detection/sampling. It looks like CT just leaves the exposure running and then samples at high frequency to get the desired resolution.
Stannous chloride does not fume. There's in fact very little in a typical darkroom that would fume and fog, with the possible exception of the old fashioned smelly sepia toning that virtually nobody's using. And you'd have to pull some really weird tricks to get 35mm film inside a casette to fog as a result. It's not fumes, this much is safe to assume.
As Augustus Ceasar discusses above. I think you would be better served shooting Delta 3200 rated at 1600. I process mine in ilford DDX. The negatives in your example have very high base plus fog and others have offered good suggestions about causes of that and high-grain. I have had similar fogging from an airport scanner in the last couple years. I have all of my film in a clear zipock hand-checked at every airport that will co-operate. A year ago at Heathrow, they would not cooperate, and they ended up fogging my film. (Delta 400 and Delta 3200). Looked like yours.
Images are not bad, and as mentioned before there is a lot of base color (fog)Adding also a close up
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