- Joined
- Jan 11, 2010
- Messages
- 40
- Format
- 35mm
Hi,
as a keen (and relative new) B&W phographer, not in possession of a dark room and thus dependable of labs and/or ilford.lab.uk, I notice quiet often that prints come back light/ too light. I use ilford only: FP4+, Delta 400, HP5
I do use box speed and my camera (EOS 50) is not known for over-exposing.
Is this a fault (or: characteristic) by the lab, or are they just tuned to not under-print ?
I read this thread:
(there was a url link here which no longer exists)
would the answer be to expose more, rather than less ? Say: 100 for FP4+.
Or let the lab scan the neg's, adjust myself when neccesary, and have the JPG's printed.
Perhaps this question is somewhat 'broad', but any input would be welcome.
as a keen (and relative new) B&W phographer, not in possession of a dark room and thus dependable of labs and/or ilford.lab.uk, I notice quiet often that prints come back light/ too light. I use ilford only: FP4+, Delta 400, HP5
I do use box speed and my camera (EOS 50) is not known for over-exposing.
Is this a fault (or: characteristic) by the lab, or are they just tuned to not under-print ?
I read this thread:
(there was a url link here which no longer exists)
would the answer be to expose more, rather than less ? Say: 100 for FP4+.
Or let the lab scan the neg's, adjust myself when neccesary, and have the JPG's printed.
Perhaps this question is somewhat 'broad', but any input would be welcome.
) , until a more experienced camera club member showed me how to get a full range of tones in a print, from almost-white to very-nearly-black.
