ame01999
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- Jul 28, 2009
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I'm near quoting from the Darkroom Cookbook: an intriguing sentence I wish had been expanded.
If I'm inferring from it properly, that means Adams would NOT have recommended "standard" N-1 development with the films of the 1960s-70s--that is, reducing development time WITHOUT reducing agitation and increasing dilution. My question is: why not? Speed loss? Something wrong with the curve -- compressed mid-tones?
I'm curious because the general advice given in Barry Thornton's Edge of Darkness, generally echoed elsewhere and often given to students I know, is simply: if you're shooting in sunlight/high contrast settings, increasing exposure by 2/3 a stop and cutting back development by about 1/3 will produce finer negatives with better shadow and highlight detail, increased resolution, and decreased grain.
But that advice doesn't specify solvent versus acutance developers, or mention reduced agitation at all. Thanks for your wisdom.
If I'm inferring from it properly, that means Adams would NOT have recommended "standard" N-1 development with the films of the 1960s-70s--that is, reducing development time WITHOUT reducing agitation and increasing dilution. My question is: why not? Speed loss? Something wrong with the curve -- compressed mid-tones?
I'm curious because the general advice given in Barry Thornton's Edge of Darkness, generally echoed elsewhere and often given to students I know, is simply: if you're shooting in sunlight/high contrast settings, increasing exposure by 2/3 a stop and cutting back development by about 1/3 will produce finer negatives with better shadow and highlight detail, increased resolution, and decreased grain.
But that advice doesn't specify solvent versus acutance developers, or mention reduced agitation at all. Thanks for your wisdom.