Hello.
I've been dealing with the Ilford problem of specs (sometimes called mottling) in their 120 film — dark spots in emulsion (generally all over frame) which appear as whitish spots when film scanned or printed.
FP4 is my favorite film, and that's where I saw it. I was in touch with Ilford directly earlier this year and also am aware of their announcement on their site regarding the problem. They say humidity, extreme temperatures, and expired film could be causes. I do all the right things re environment for the film, but I noticed that the rolls with problems were expired when I shot them. So I thought I'd be okay as long as I used fresh film.
Well, I recently shot a roll that expires in 2022, and lo and behold, the specs were there.
Though I always give the film plenty of time to come to room temperature (more than 24 hrs), I've begun to wonder if the film should not be put in refrigerator or freezer, if somehow the moisture can get to the film. Last night, I saw a thread here where others have wondered the same thing. In that thread, the person who started the thread had problem with Bergger film that he had never put in refrigerator or freezer. His problem was vertical drippy-looking lines. I have had that problem with FP4, too (in addition to the specs problem). Here is that thread, in case anyone is interested:
https://www.photrio.com/forum/threads/and-the-backing-paper-plague-hits-bergger.175465/
The refrigerate/not refrigerate is an interesting issue, but that's not what my question is about. I'm tired of dealing with the Ilford problem. I give up on FP4 and want to switch to a different ISO 100 film.
I like the oldstyle grain, so I considered Rollei RPX 100. But after researching it on internet, it appears it is made by Ilford! Or at least put together by them. So I imagine I'd be at risk of having the same problem I had with the FP4. I also read a post by someone who had trouble with RPX 25, not exactly the same issue I had, but some sort of manufacturing issue which caused problems in emulsion.
I read that Fomapan has a serious curling issue which would be bad for scanning. So that's out.
So I thought I'd go to Tmax 100, even though it has the more modern style grain.
But then I ran across posts which mentioned paper backing issues with their 120 films. Don't remember if it was just Tmax or also Trix. I actually had this problem myself a few years ago with a roll of Tmax 400. Numbers and and other things appeared in my images when film developed. When I called my lab, they said they see this sort of thing with film shot in toy cameras, so I thought maybe my Hassy back had a leak, or I had caused the problem in some other way. I didn't have the problem with any other rolls, so I didn't pursue it. It was only last night, in a thread in this forum (I think the thread I pasted above), that I found out other people had the same problem, and it had something to do with the Kodak's paper backing.
I have used a good amount of Tmax 400 without problems since I had the problem roll. I have also used Trix fairly often recently without problems.
Here is my question: Is the problem with backing paper for Kodak 120 film gone? Is it a known fact that Kodak fixed the problem?
I'm really sick of putting a lot of effort into taking photos, paying to have film developed and contacts made, scanning, working on images in Photoshop.....only to find the film was defective.
Thanks.
Kat
I've been dealing with the Ilford problem of specs (sometimes called mottling) in their 120 film — dark spots in emulsion (generally all over frame) which appear as whitish spots when film scanned or printed.
FP4 is my favorite film, and that's where I saw it. I was in touch with Ilford directly earlier this year and also am aware of their announcement on their site regarding the problem. They say humidity, extreme temperatures, and expired film could be causes. I do all the right things re environment for the film, but I noticed that the rolls with problems were expired when I shot them. So I thought I'd be okay as long as I used fresh film.
Well, I recently shot a roll that expires in 2022, and lo and behold, the specs were there.
Though I always give the film plenty of time to come to room temperature (more than 24 hrs), I've begun to wonder if the film should not be put in refrigerator or freezer, if somehow the moisture can get to the film. Last night, I saw a thread here where others have wondered the same thing. In that thread, the person who started the thread had problem with Bergger film that he had never put in refrigerator or freezer. His problem was vertical drippy-looking lines. I have had that problem with FP4, too (in addition to the specs problem). Here is that thread, in case anyone is interested:
https://www.photrio.com/forum/threads/and-the-backing-paper-plague-hits-bergger.175465/
The refrigerate/not refrigerate is an interesting issue, but that's not what my question is about. I'm tired of dealing with the Ilford problem. I give up on FP4 and want to switch to a different ISO 100 film.
I like the oldstyle grain, so I considered Rollei RPX 100. But after researching it on internet, it appears it is made by Ilford! Or at least put together by them. So I imagine I'd be at risk of having the same problem I had with the FP4. I also read a post by someone who had trouble with RPX 25, not exactly the same issue I had, but some sort of manufacturing issue which caused problems in emulsion.
I read that Fomapan has a serious curling issue which would be bad for scanning. So that's out.
So I thought I'd go to Tmax 100, even though it has the more modern style grain.
But then I ran across posts which mentioned paper backing issues with their 120 films. Don't remember if it was just Tmax or also Trix. I actually had this problem myself a few years ago with a roll of Tmax 400. Numbers and and other things appeared in my images when film developed. When I called my lab, they said they see this sort of thing with film shot in toy cameras, so I thought maybe my Hassy back had a leak, or I had caused the problem in some other way. I didn't have the problem with any other rolls, so I didn't pursue it. It was only last night, in a thread in this forum (I think the thread I pasted above), that I found out other people had the same problem, and it had something to do with the Kodak's paper backing.
I have used a good amount of Tmax 400 without problems since I had the problem roll. I have also used Trix fairly often recently without problems.
Here is my question: Is the problem with backing paper for Kodak 120 film gone? Is it a known fact that Kodak fixed the problem?
I'm really sick of putting a lot of effort into taking photos, paying to have film developed and contacts made, scanning, working on images in Photoshop.....only to find the film was defective.
Thanks.
Kat
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