Dear Ziyangli et al,
6 degrees F variation is nowhere near enough to cause reticulation in a modern film emulsion from ILFORD, KODAK or FUJI...
Its always very, very difficult to tell without the neg, but they do not look like typical loading scratches as they are not linear* but nor does it look like reticulation, what it actually looks like is dry scuff damage on the back coat that was hard enough to damage the coating and allow chemical lifting.
* although we have obviously seen scratches move in a random none linear fashion, usually caused by very fine sand or grit being rolled by the darkslide, and as the particle is not round it tracks.
So my question is, where did you load or unload the film ? and could it have been laid directly into contact on any surface. ?
Simon ILFORD Photo / HARMAN technology Limited :
6 degrees F variation is nowhere near enough to cause reticulation in a modern film emulsion from ILFORD, KODAK or FUJI...
Its always very, very difficult to tell without the neg, but they do not look like typical loading scratches as they are not linear* but nor does it look like reticulation, what it actually looks like is dry scuff damage on the back coat that was hard enough to damage the coating and allow chemical lifting.
* although we have obviously seen scratches move in a random none linear fashion, usually caused by very fine sand or grit being rolled by the darkslide, and as the particle is not round it tracks.
So my question is, where did you load or unload the film ? and could it have been laid directly into contact on any surface. ?
Simon ILFORD Photo / HARMAN technology Limited :
. What is different at home? Water for sure, and maybe temperature control.
