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- Feb 9, 2010
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Process promptly (within 7 days) for best speed and contrast.
You may experience latent image degradation when you develop your summertime pictures after the holidays.
Conversely, you may get amazing contrast and speed when you develop your film right away in excitement.
Last month I caught up a year old backlog. I graphed different speed and contrast from the same film developed in the same tank for the same time. I checked old notes and saw the same. Times when I struggled to reach contrast aims, the latent images tended to be older.
When I load cassettes from bulk rolls, I will place sensitometry exposures on the leader of half the rolls and mark “6 for sens” as a reminder to wind past 6 before shooting (the other rolls will have a full 36 exposures).
Naturally, pre-exposing test strips causes old latent images for sensitometry if you don’t develop promptly.
Sometimes I’ll pull a length from the bulk loader and expose a fresh sensitometry strip to put in the tank. For example when there’s room for another reel because I only have a few rolls to develop, or if none of the rolls has a test strip on it already. These will be fresh.
In those examples a tank can have an old and a new sensitometry strip of the same film and when graphed, will reveal different speeds and contrast.
Not just test anomalies. These are real differences with practical implications. Carefully-exposed shots that would be excellent if processed promptly can come out underexposed and flat if you leave the film lying around too long. Too long is about a year.







You may experience latent image degradation when you develop your summertime pictures after the holidays.
Conversely, you may get amazing contrast and speed when you develop your film right away in excitement.
Last month I caught up a year old backlog. I graphed different speed and contrast from the same film developed in the same tank for the same time. I checked old notes and saw the same. Times when I struggled to reach contrast aims, the latent images tended to be older.
When I load cassettes from bulk rolls, I will place sensitometry exposures on the leader of half the rolls and mark “6 for sens” as a reminder to wind past 6 before shooting (the other rolls will have a full 36 exposures).
Naturally, pre-exposing test strips causes old latent images for sensitometry if you don’t develop promptly.
Sometimes I’ll pull a length from the bulk loader and expose a fresh sensitometry strip to put in the tank. For example when there’s room for another reel because I only have a few rolls to develop, or if none of the rolls has a test strip on it already. These will be fresh.
In those examples a tank can have an old and a new sensitometry strip of the same film and when graphed, will reveal different speeds and contrast.
Not just test anomalies. These are real differences with practical implications. Carefully-exposed shots that would be excellent if processed promptly can come out underexposed and flat if you leave the film lying around too long. Too long is about a year.







