Hello all,
I wish to try to understand the ideas around image and general stain.
To my mind, as the film is developing in the staining developer solution, a stain develops in and around the image parts as these parts are most sensitized for development. As development proceeds if conditions are right (eg. too high pH, too much oxidation, too little chemicals to prevent aerial oxidation ... etc.) then the staining action goes too far and it occurs over the whole of the film including out-of-image areas. Its not as though the staining action stops in the image area at some point its just that it goes too far and proceeds onto the film in general.
So general stain is bad because you have to print through it and it is also possibly somewhat inconsistent. ie. some parts of the film are more affected than others.
The idea is to allow stain to develop but only to the point where staining in general starts to occur and no more. At this point one might consider a negative to be 'maximally stained'.
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Have I got it right ? Is this how it happens ? Is it absolutely true that a negative that has general stain is badly compromised ? Could one develop negatives to the point where stain is visible and be assured they hadn't damaged the image itself ?
Please offer your corrections if I am wrong. That is what I'd like to see.
Cheers,
I wish to try to understand the ideas around image and general stain.
To my mind, as the film is developing in the staining developer solution, a stain develops in and around the image parts as these parts are most sensitized for development. As development proceeds if conditions are right (eg. too high pH, too much oxidation, too little chemicals to prevent aerial oxidation ... etc.) then the staining action goes too far and it occurs over the whole of the film including out-of-image areas. Its not as though the staining action stops in the image area at some point its just that it goes too far and proceeds onto the film in general.
So general stain is bad because you have to print through it and it is also possibly somewhat inconsistent. ie. some parts of the film are more affected than others.
The idea is to allow stain to develop but only to the point where staining in general starts to occur and no more. At this point one might consider a negative to be 'maximally stained'.
---
Have I got it right ? Is this how it happens ? Is it absolutely true that a negative that has general stain is badly compromised ? Could one develop negatives to the point where stain is visible and be assured they hadn't damaged the image itself ?
Please offer your corrections if I am wrong. That is what I'd like to see.
Cheers,
