BetterSense
Member
Since I started shooting 35mm B&W, I have been mostly shooting TMY of unknown age, except for one roll of new TriX I bought and the odd roll of XP2. I put my negatives in PrintFile sheets and contact print them to a sheet of Illford RC paper, using a grade 2 filter, for long enough that the sprocket area of the film is just perceptably lighter than the surrounding paper, which is full black or very close to it.
It seems like the entire contact sheet is too dark, to me. Typically, there are a few shots that I overexposed by 1-2 stops, and they jump right out and look more 'normal' or more like I would print them. The negatives are printable, but unfortunately with my skill, I can't say if they are too thin based either on how they print or how they look on the light table. I just don't have the experience.
My first reaction would be to just rate my film at 200, but I don't want to jump the gun. There may be something iffy about the way I make my contact sheets or the way I interpret them. My rather arbitrary method of base+fog matching may be irrelevant to how negatives actually enlarge.
I always develop in D76 1+1 according to Kodak's times for box speed.
It seems like the entire contact sheet is too dark, to me. Typically, there are a few shots that I overexposed by 1-2 stops, and they jump right out and look more 'normal' or more like I would print them. The negatives are printable, but unfortunately with my skill, I can't say if they are too thin based either on how they print or how they look on the light table. I just don't have the experience.
My first reaction would be to just rate my film at 200, but I don't want to jump the gun. There may be something iffy about the way I make my contact sheets or the way I interpret them. My rather arbitrary method of base+fog matching may be irrelevant to how negatives actually enlarge.
I always develop in D76 1+1 according to Kodak's times for box speed.