- Joined
- Oct 11, 2012
- Messages
- 17
- Format
- Multi Format
Hey all,
I'm not sure if this is a question or a rant/vent but I'd be interested in anyone who can identify lessons I can learn from this experience. I've only been printing at home for ~ 1 year.
This year I've made 3 trips to a location trying to get a print I was happy with. I kept getting very low contrast muddy looking prints and was blaming the scene (tonal value of elements similar?) or my exposure or negative processing times. Changing the contrast filter didn't make much/any difference. One weird thing was that I was having to make very short exposure times when printing - like my exposure meter told me 3.5 seconds at f18 but when making the print anything over 1 second was coming out dark grey to black. my best (8x10) print so far was exposed for 0.9 seconds at f18. I've made absolutely sure I didn't have the lens in aperture preview mode or anything silly like that.
The common factor is that I've been using Ultrafine Silver Eagle FB paper. I bought the paper within 12 months and it has been stored inside the black plastic, inside its box, inside another box in a cupboard so I assumed it was OK.
Just now in frustration I made a print on a sheet of Ultrafine Elite RC paper, the first sheet out of an unopened box that I bought at the same time as the fiber paper and stored in the same place. The print is exactly what I wanted - the tones are crisp and pleasant with a full range from black to white. The exposure time was exactly what my meter told me.
So it seems pretty likely that the fiber paper is bad. I'm wondering what could have been the culprit here? I'm pretty sure it hasn't been exposed to light - I only pull out one sheet at a time under safelight and it is stored in as dark a spot as I can manage. Admittedly it hasn't been in the fridge but if heat is a problem wouldn't the RC paper be affected the same? Or is FB paper more vulnerable to heat? Is the very short exposure time with the FB paper indicative of anything? Can you get batches of paper that are just bad when they arrive? Do I need to review my darkroom practices?
I'm not sure if this is a question or a rant/vent but I'd be interested in anyone who can identify lessons I can learn from this experience. I've only been printing at home for ~ 1 year.
This year I've made 3 trips to a location trying to get a print I was happy with. I kept getting very low contrast muddy looking prints and was blaming the scene (tonal value of elements similar?) or my exposure or negative processing times. Changing the contrast filter didn't make much/any difference. One weird thing was that I was having to make very short exposure times when printing - like my exposure meter told me 3.5 seconds at f18 but when making the print anything over 1 second was coming out dark grey to black. my best (8x10) print so far was exposed for 0.9 seconds at f18. I've made absolutely sure I didn't have the lens in aperture preview mode or anything silly like that.
The common factor is that I've been using Ultrafine Silver Eagle FB paper. I bought the paper within 12 months and it has been stored inside the black plastic, inside its box, inside another box in a cupboard so I assumed it was OK.
Just now in frustration I made a print on a sheet of Ultrafine Elite RC paper, the first sheet out of an unopened box that I bought at the same time as the fiber paper and stored in the same place. The print is exactly what I wanted - the tones are crisp and pleasant with a full range from black to white. The exposure time was exactly what my meter told me.
So it seems pretty likely that the fiber paper is bad. I'm wondering what could have been the culprit here? I'm pretty sure it hasn't been exposed to light - I only pull out one sheet at a time under safelight and it is stored in as dark a spot as I can manage. Admittedly it hasn't been in the fridge but if heat is a problem wouldn't the RC paper be affected the same? Or is FB paper more vulnerable to heat? Is the very short exposure time with the FB paper indicative of anything? Can you get batches of paper that are just bad when they arrive? Do I need to review my darkroom practices?

