All of this is great advice.
Some of the Foma films develop very quickly, and they react fast to development changes.
***> yes, that's for sure
single biggest control a darkroom worker has is how long we develop our film for. Too much time will yield excessive contrast and sometimes blocked highlights. Too little time will yield poor contrast and weak mid-tones. Practice, practice, practice.
***> well got burned out trying with the 3x4 and 4x5 LF, with different lenses, in case it was just the lens and then needed a break and picked up the MF and color for a while.. really like the film and it has a look I like.. so were going to try again.
Color filters are great, but when you darken one color (the opposite color of the filter color on the color wheel), you will at the same time lighten anything that is of the same color as the filter. Very few colors in a scene are NOT altered when using color filters.
***>I use filters when needed but the shots I'm having trouble with, those with sky in it, are the ones I'm trying to get the developing down for, and do not need the filters usually for these large area shots
Neutral density - will not change the end results at all with respect to contrast. It just enables you to make longer exposures, or use wider apertures with the same exposure time. It's a good tool, but it doesn't solve the problem at hand.
***> ah... yes that makes sense... I use mine for 35color side film, and thought it might do the trick possibly for for this, but I can understand that it would not solve the problem..
I found that I got the best results from Foma 400 when I shot it at EI 160 as metered with an incident meter. The Foma 200 I usually shoot at 80 or 100. Developing times will be shorter than usual.