jernejk
Member
- Joined
- Jul 5, 2010
- Messages
- 213
- Format
- 35mm
It's common knowledge that overdeveloping film will increase contrast, right? But why and how does that happen exactly?
And maybe even more interesting, why doesn't paper show the same effect?
I never time paper development. But even if I leave the paper soaking for some extra time in developer, I notice nothing like increased contrast. Maybe the whole image gets a tad darker, but that's it.
Why is film different? What happens when you develop it for 5, 10, 20% extra time?
Do just midtones turn darker on the negative? I can't imagine shadows (light areas on the negative) become lighter on the negative with longer development, which would really mean the contrast has increased...?
And maybe even more interesting, why doesn't paper show the same effect?
I never time paper development. But even if I leave the paper soaking for some extra time in developer, I notice nothing like increased contrast. Maybe the whole image gets a tad darker, but that's it.
Why is film different? What happens when you develop it for 5, 10, 20% extra time?
Do just midtones turn darker on the negative? I can't imagine shadows (light areas on the negative) become lighter on the negative with longer development, which would really mean the contrast has increased...?