Now I'm stumped. The stripes move from place to place on the frame, and sometimes diverge. Don't think this can be a film problem. Could there be any light leaks in your darkroom (bathroom?) or your developing tank? It shouldn't have anything to do with your drying process because by that time all the exposure and development has been done.
Did you prewash the film?
These do no look like a chemical/processing issue, but more like Xray scan lines.
It shouldn't have anything to do with your drying process because by that time all the exposure and development has been done.
X-rays in any case would add density, not reduce it.
Not the two stripes being the artefact, but the rest.true - and in this case it might be that the areas with less density were between the beams.
Not the two stripes being the artefact, but the rest.
Interesting thought.
Hello fellow film aficionados,
I have been "using" this forum for a long time as a source of information and learned a lot from the discussions posted. Now I finally got an account of my own as I could not find anything through searching the boards. Been developing B+W film for two years now, and I have my "regimen" and I treat it as a natural process, whereas things can turn out differently even if you follow all your steps to the detail.
That being said: I have been using Rollei RPX 400 120 for a few weeks now and shot about 5 rolls with it, some in a Mamia RZ 67 and some in a Yashica Mat 124G. All came out fine with exception of the idiot error like opening your film back unshaded in the mid day sun to remove an exposed spool....meh
Enter the weird one: Snapped some test shots in a studio with my Yashica to test if the flash sync and everything works properly.
View attachment 61620 View attachment 61621
This one film I developed has these strange wide marks along the entire film roll. They are about half a centimeder wide and sort of "snake" around. On one side it starts out as a thick wide strip and then branches off into two and they start moving around. They are not light related as they would be black on the negs.
Here are my theories:
1: Something to do with the film manufacturing process?
2: Something done differently during developing? (Can't see what I did did differently apart from accidentally rinsing the film with semi-hot water and then switched back to cold when I realized this).
3: After a final rinse with filtered water and some Tetenal Mirasol 2000 wetting agent, I hang all my film on my shower head as its the only high enough place in my bathroom to hang 135 and 120 film. It's a flat rainshower type heat so the clips fit niely around the round head. When they dry they usually have very faint water spots as the water is ultra hard in Berlin. Sometimes the shower head drips randomly, even if I showered hours earlier. This time it defo did as the lower clip was wet after a whole day drying and I had to clean the newly acquired mineral deposits from the drip water...that is when I put the film on the light table and discovered these weird bars... As I said before they start out as one, and that was the first frame that hung closest to the shower head. Could it be that there was a substantial drip, which caused the drying film to have a stream of water running alongside it that was constantly wet, resulting in an uneven drying process? This would somehow explain why the lines don't follow a particular pattern and look like a stream of water?
Sorry for this huge monster post but it baffles me and I really want to know what i going onLuckily this was a test film
Looking forward to your expertise![]()
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