Juan Valdenebro
Member
I have never done any alternative process. But I want a scene (negative) available just in case for my future. I don't want to make a digital negative.
Next Friday 22nd I'll give a talk at a museum, and I asked a friend to do a portrait of me, a couple of hours before the event, so, by 2-3 PM.
I asked him to do the same exposure 12 times (medium format): I'll be standing next to a wall with a 7 feet tall print of a diagram with text (from my second book) that's there to be read by students and teachers while I explain it. I think I'll use my Hasselblad's 50mm instead of the normal lens, as I need that wider coverage and also that type of DOF, requiring both my face and the wall's text sharp, without using a tripod. I'll use natural light (inner yard corridor wall) but just a few stops below common outdoors light. I guess I'll have to uprate my film slightly: no problem at all for flat light.
I will use HP5+. I have TMX too, but it's too slow for this IMO, and I've also read it's not an optimal film for some alternative processes. I know ISO400 isn't optimal either, but I just can't buy other films or carry a tripod. I'm sorry: I won't use a staining developer, as I love grain, and yes, I know -only superficially, of course- about UV light use and stain advantages. I know purists wouldn't do things the way I plan to do them, but I'll pay to see. I have Perceptol, Rodinal, D-76, HC-110, FX-39 and Microphen. I think the last one is the best option in this case.
I plan cutting the strip in four pieces, and do four development times: the shortest one for (silver paper with) my condensor enlarger, two more in the middle, and the longest one will be twice the time for a diffussion enlarger, what's often recommended for salt prints.
Thanks for all comments and recommendations on the way you'd do it.
Next Friday 22nd I'll give a talk at a museum, and I asked a friend to do a portrait of me, a couple of hours before the event, so, by 2-3 PM.
I asked him to do the same exposure 12 times (medium format): I'll be standing next to a wall with a 7 feet tall print of a diagram with text (from my second book) that's there to be read by students and teachers while I explain it. I think I'll use my Hasselblad's 50mm instead of the normal lens, as I need that wider coverage and also that type of DOF, requiring both my face and the wall's text sharp, without using a tripod. I'll use natural light (inner yard corridor wall) but just a few stops below common outdoors light. I guess I'll have to uprate my film slightly: no problem at all for flat light.
I will use HP5+. I have TMX too, but it's too slow for this IMO, and I've also read it's not an optimal film for some alternative processes. I know ISO400 isn't optimal either, but I just can't buy other films or carry a tripod. I'm sorry: I won't use a staining developer, as I love grain, and yes, I know -only superficially, of course- about UV light use and stain advantages. I know purists wouldn't do things the way I plan to do them, but I'll pay to see. I have Perceptol, Rodinal, D-76, HC-110, FX-39 and Microphen. I think the last one is the best option in this case.
I plan cutting the strip in four pieces, and do four development times: the shortest one for (silver paper with) my condensor enlarger, two more in the middle, and the longest one will be twice the time for a diffussion enlarger, what's often recommended for salt prints.
Thanks for all comments and recommendations on the way you'd do it.
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