ginandtonic
Member
Hi people,
I did my first B&W development this morning. The results arnt amazing, but I am just really excited to have produced an image at all and am looking forward to improving with practice.
However, along the whole negative strip appeared a white line. It is in the same position in more or less every frame. What could this be? I was thinking that I might have somehow broken the film by handling it wrong, but I have seen other issues mentioned such as over agitation. Of course I will try again and maybe the line will disappear, but would be good to have your thoughts so I can try to improve my technique.
In addition, lots of calcium deposits. I have seen some people mention they used distilled water. Just for the wash or to mix the chemicals too? I am in London which has very hard water.
A sample photo is attached. It is taken on an OM10, FP4+ film pushed two stops (I know pushing this film isnt ideal) ID11 Developer for 14 minutes at 22 degrees. Ilfostop stop bath (probably a bit stronger than proscribed) and Ilford Rapid Fixer. Developed in a patterson tank, inversion agitation.
I did my first B&W development this morning. The results arnt amazing, but I am just really excited to have produced an image at all and am looking forward to improving with practice.
However, along the whole negative strip appeared a white line. It is in the same position in more or less every frame. What could this be? I was thinking that I might have somehow broken the film by handling it wrong, but I have seen other issues mentioned such as over agitation. Of course I will try again and maybe the line will disappear, but would be good to have your thoughts so I can try to improve my technique.
In addition, lots of calcium deposits. I have seen some people mention they used distilled water. Just for the wash or to mix the chemicals too? I am in London which has very hard water.
A sample photo is attached. It is taken on an OM10, FP4+ film pushed two stops (I know pushing this film isnt ideal) ID11 Developer for 14 minutes at 22 degrees. Ilfostop stop bath (probably a bit stronger than proscribed) and Ilford Rapid Fixer. Developed in a patterson tank, inversion agitation.