Larry the sailor
Member
Sort of an experiment.
I've got an old Soligor C/D 95-310 f5.6 Zoom/Macro. I bought this lens new in 1985 In Yokosuka, Japan on a port visit.
At the time I was using a Canon AE-1 and never really had much in the way of good results with the lens. Maybe in part because I had a kind of cheap, light tripod or tried to shoot it handheld. I always thought it was kind of soft/low contrast.
Anyway, I dug it out of storage the other day to try to use the macro feature and see if my increased experience, much better tripod, better camera, (New F1) and improved skills would net me better results. I'm not expecting miracles though.
I take pretty good care of my stuff even if it is put away for a couple of decades, No marks on the glass, no fungus, doesn't look much different than when I bought it new.
Now to the heart of the issue.
I shot a couple rolls of HP5+ through it using the macro range and will be developing the 2 rolls in different developers to see what will give me the best sharpness/contrast.
My current developer options are D76, Microphen or Rodinal. I'm leaning toward D76 for one and Microphen for the other, I guess I could shoot another roll and use all three but that sounds too scientific.
Which option should tend to maximize what ever inherent sharpness and contrast this lens has to offer? Or, is there another option likely to give me the results I'm looking for?
I've got an old Soligor C/D 95-310 f5.6 Zoom/Macro. I bought this lens new in 1985 In Yokosuka, Japan on a port visit.
At the time I was using a Canon AE-1 and never really had much in the way of good results with the lens. Maybe in part because I had a kind of cheap, light tripod or tried to shoot it handheld. I always thought it was kind of soft/low contrast.
Anyway, I dug it out of storage the other day to try to use the macro feature and see if my increased experience, much better tripod, better camera, (New F1) and improved skills would net me better results. I'm not expecting miracles though.
I take pretty good care of my stuff even if it is put away for a couple of decades, No marks on the glass, no fungus, doesn't look much different than when I bought it new.
Now to the heart of the issue.
I shot a couple rolls of HP5+ through it using the macro range and will be developing the 2 rolls in different developers to see what will give me the best sharpness/contrast.
My current developer options are D76, Microphen or Rodinal. I'm leaning toward D76 for one and Microphen for the other, I guess I could shoot another roll and use all three but that sounds too scientific.
Which option should tend to maximize what ever inherent sharpness and contrast this lens has to offer? Or, is there another option likely to give me the results I'm looking for?