bonk
Member
- Joined
- Mar 31, 2007
- Messages
- 214
- Format
- Med. Format Pan
I have really never given the development time of the photographic paper much thought.
So far I always used the development time that was suggested by the manufacturer as the minimum time and I took the paper out of the developer after that time or if the developer was used a bit, after I could not see the image getting darker anymore.
But after reading the chapter „Factorial Development“ in „The Print“ by Ansel Adams it occurred to me that it may actually be important to get the development time of photographic paper in the first tray as correct as possible. In that chapter he writes about how to adjust the development time based on the changing emergence time of some key part of the image while it develops.
Now my question is: Can it influence the overall print quality if the paper is in the developer for too long? How long is too long how long is exactly right?
So far I always used the development time that was suggested by the manufacturer as the minimum time and I took the paper out of the developer after that time or if the developer was used a bit, after I could not see the image getting darker anymore.
But after reading the chapter „Factorial Development“ in „The Print“ by Ansel Adams it occurred to me that it may actually be important to get the development time of photographic paper in the first tray as correct as possible. In that chapter he writes about how to adjust the development time based on the changing emergence time of some key part of the image while it develops.
Now my question is: Can it influence the overall print quality if the paper is in the developer for too long? How long is too long how long is exactly right?
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