Sparky
Member
So - it seems to me - in retrospect, and after all these years developing film and exploring the wonders of sensitometry and alternative developers, etc... that the old adage 'expose for the shadows and develop for the highlights' really IS true, and strangely more valid than one would think.
I could be wrong (PLEASE TELL ME SO??) - but, it seems to me - that a film's toe position and (relative not absoulute) density is set by exposure ALONE. The toe, it seems, cannot be really significantly affected by development.
THUS - it would seem to follow that, within reason (i.e. within a 25% or so range) that development method is irrelevant in terms of coaxing information out of the film (since you'd be able to adjust for whatever was lacking in the darkroom, by increasing contrast, etc etc...)
The reason I'm asking this... is because I just shot 6 rolls of film tonight of the Los Angeles fires in the hills (pretty wild, dantesque scene it WAS, too!!) on my trusty 500c/m - and I bracketed a pretty wild amount - from 1 sec all the way up to five minutes. I suspect the shorter exposures will be more successful in capturing the flame and smoke - but I suspect they're woefully underexposed.
The only thing I could possibly think of to have improved my chances would have been to hypersensitize the film with mercury first.. though I've never done it...
I could be wrong (PLEASE TELL ME SO??) - but, it seems to me - that a film's toe position and (relative not absoulute) density is set by exposure ALONE. The toe, it seems, cannot be really significantly affected by development.
THUS - it would seem to follow that, within reason (i.e. within a 25% or so range) that development method is irrelevant in terms of coaxing information out of the film (since you'd be able to adjust for whatever was lacking in the darkroom, by increasing contrast, etc etc...)
The reason I'm asking this... is because I just shot 6 rolls of film tonight of the Los Angeles fires in the hills (pretty wild, dantesque scene it WAS, too!!) on my trusty 500c/m - and I bracketed a pretty wild amount - from 1 sec all the way up to five minutes. I suspect the shorter exposures will be more successful in capturing the flame and smoke - but I suspect they're woefully underexposed.
The only thing I could possibly think of to have improved my chances would have been to hypersensitize the film with mercury first.. though I've never done it...