- Joined
- Mar 31, 2014
- Messages
- 399
- Format
- 35mm
Hi all
I've been working a project for 2 years now and it's the first time I've come to this point. I went shooting and all my scans looked overexposed or overdevloped. I've noticed the negatives looked way dense then my other shots but how can I tell it's overdeveloped or overexposed? I metered the same way I always do and I developed the same way like last two years. So either temperature of the developer was too high or metering was fault... But I doubt both. Also same camera...
Hope you can help me.
Either three things:
- I messed up metering, but I check at home with other meters and I do it correctly
- I messed up developing... could be higher temperature but doubtful
- Camera's shutter is inaccurate... but very doubtful, previous week it was doing fine
Left negative is from today (way too dense overdevved or overexposed) and right negative sheet is from other day with good exposure/development.
Thanks
I've been working a project for 2 years now and it's the first time I've come to this point. I went shooting and all my scans looked overexposed or overdevloped. I've noticed the negatives looked way dense then my other shots but how can I tell it's overdeveloped or overexposed? I metered the same way I always do and I developed the same way like last two years. So either temperature of the developer was too high or metering was fault... But I doubt both. Also same camera...
Hope you can help me.
Either three things:
- I messed up metering, but I check at home with other meters and I do it correctly
- I messed up developing... could be higher temperature but doubtful
- Camera's shutter is inaccurate... but very doubtful, previous week it was doing fine
Left negative is from today (way too dense overdevved or overexposed) and right negative sheet is from other day with good exposure/development.
Thanks

