To put it bluntly, I was once asked by a very experienced photographer what the term 'blown highlights' means. I had to explain it. It was pointed out to me that the preferred nomenclature is 'blocked up' highlights.
Something to consider... I'm envisioning a stick of dynamite going boom, or an extremely powerful fan sized like a jet airplane engine blowing really strong winds on the highlights... LOL
It really is an unfortunate term.
I agree with Nicholas. But keep in mind that when you control highlight density you still have to give your film enough exposure to reveal enough shadow density. Your choice of developer, agitation technique, and agitation interval can all help in taming the negative contrast to your liking.
The 100 speed exhibits more contrast and sometimes you'll get highlights that are difficult to print if you don't watch it.
For me, the perfect companion for these films is Xtol, although I'm sure most any developer can be made to work beautifully.
I use only Xtol and Tmax 400, and know exactly how to treat the film in every lighting scenario now, and 99% of the time I have negatives that print easily.
Most of the time I process the film longer than the manufacturer recommends, and I vary the time and agitation a lot based on the lighting conditions. Slowing agitation down is a powerful tool to taming much unwanted contrast and highlight density. As it lowers that highlight density, you also maintain nice mid-tone separation, as mid-tone development is a function of both time and agitation, while highlight density is more a function of agitation as the developer exhausts faster in that part of the range of tones.
Experiment more, alter time and agitation, eventually you'll have a recipe for how to get the highlights just where you want them.
- Thomas
The term 'blown highlights' doesn't really say what is going on. It can be either:
1) The film has hit it's shoulder and the contrast in the highlights has gone to zero.
2) The film has not hit the shoulder, there is lots of contrast in the highlights, but they are beyond the toe of the paper.
3) A deadly combination of 1 & 2 - the film has shouldered off at such a density that the paper has toed-out.
There are often complaints of 'blown highlights' with TMax films and with the old Technical Pan. In both cases the highlights are there in the negative in all their glory, but the density range of the negative can not be captured on paper. Careful burning and a bit of paper flashing will reveal the highlight detail again. Another option is to is to print the highlights down and then bleach them back to recover the 'sparkle' - while this gets the highlights off the toe of the paper curve it has the disadvantage of lowering the contrast in the midtones as paper contrast has to be lowered to fit the expanded negative tonal scale.
One good option is to use a contrast mask to build density only in the shadow areas - allowing you to print down the negative to get the highlight detail. However, shadow detail is lost as the masking lowers the shadow contrast, but the unsharp masking effect in the shadows can often preserve the illusion of shadow detail.
The only real solution is to control the contrast in the original scene by avoiding bright sun and using reflectors or flash to fill in the shadows.
The next best solution is to use N-1 development with slight ovexposure to produce a less contrasty negative - you still have the problem of less contrast in the midtones but as the negative is now more printable it is easier to manipulate the shadows and highlights when printing to recover the midtone contrast.