Pinholes on negatives

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DrPablo

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I've developed a few 8x10 FP4+ negatives that are full of pinholes. The holders are pretty much free of dust, and I'm only using water as a stop bath. Any thoughts on how else I can prevent this?
 

kevs

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Hi,

If the spots aren't caused by dust on the films pre-exposure, it's possible that air bubbles are sticking to the films during development. You can prevent this by pre-soaking your films before development using water at or slightly below the development temperature with a couple of drops of wetting agent added. This will evenly soak the film and swell the emulsion for development. Leave it in the tank for a couple of minutes, then drain before pouring in your developer.

You can also add wetting agent to the dev, but again only a couple of drops.

I use this technique with 120 and 35mm films, and rarely see a pinhole.
 

PHOTOTONE

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Another thing, even if your film holders are "clinically clean", the inside of the bellows of your camera may be a dirt wonderland. This can cause dirt to adhere to the film when the dark slide is removed. Vacuuming out the inside of your camera is always a good idea from time to time. With the bellows fully extended.
 

lightranger

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Pinholes are caused by too strong of stop bath mixture, especially with acidic acid, but you say you are only using water for a stop. I would recommend a good presoak of about five minutes. I find this extremely helpful with large format films.
 
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nicolai

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Lowell, I'm preparing to move and my copy is packed at the moment, so I can't cite a page number, but IIRC Adams explicitly said that pinholes in the emulsion can be caused by over-fixing in The Negative. And the only time I've gotten pinholes is when I fixed for longer than usual. YMMV, but it is possible.
 

nicolai

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I should also note that I used a water stop when that happened, as is recommended for Diafine (my standard developer).
 
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