Necator
Member
I have read various posts about stand development, but I am still trying to find out the pros and cons of this method. Can you enlighten me?
Henrik
Henrik
Different developers handle reaction byproducts differently, and even dilution matters. Just one example: D-76 full strength is able to absorb development-damping byproducts much more readily than D-76 diluted 1+1. So it would seem that diluted D-76 would exhibit a greater edge effect than full strength.
So those that prefer the effect have experimented to find the film emulsions, developers, dilutions, times, and agitation regimes that accentuate this effect.
That, I think, is the big picture.
... i haven't found a good way to
stand develop sheet film
john
Ian Grant hit the high points in his first post on this thread. I just processed a dozen rolls of Acros 120 in Pyrocat-HD, some rolls using it as a divided developer and some with minimal agitation (1/4, 1/2, 3/4 of development time after initial agitation.) My results were mixed. The negatives are very sharp and display good edge effects. However, those negatives with blank sky show a whole lot of swirly drag marks. I fault technique over developer choice in this case. I plan to alter my initial agitation a bit to get things developing more smoothly. Negatives without sky or other large areas of similar tone are fine. It takes a bit of practice.
Peter Gomena
The Combi Plan film holder looks like this:
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curved slots that hold the film with the 5 inch side vertical.
Semi-stand has also worked well for me with the Summitek Cradle for 4x5. The currently available equivalent is the Photoformulary version:
http://www.photoformulary.com/Deskt...tabindex=2&categoryid=78&selection=0&langID=0
Lee
*********Yes, I noticed, but yours had some more specific questions, and I did not want to steal your thread.
*********
Some time back I made the (true) statement that in almost fifty years of photographing, I have never met one person who uses "stand" development.
I was informed by the cogniscenti that I just did not hang with the right people. Maybe so. I recall reading, in an old copy of Sussman, about minimal agitation and that some people even go as far as to use 'stand' development. That is the only mention I have ever read about the procedure until I joined APUG.
My dinosaur intellect tells me that noobs wanting to do "stand" development are in the same class as the noobs who barely learned how to load a camera with film; then before even developing the first roll, want to know how much to "push" the film.
It is far, far better to acquire a repeatable technique; practice it diligently with one film, one film developer, for a year--before sailing off to non-standard, tricky procedures.
There, I have said mah piece.
[/QUOTE]Even though you may have never heard of it before you joined APUG
*******
I said I had never known anyone who used it. I said I had heard of it.
Sandy King
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