Ivo Stunga
Member
"I would not fix after you have Bleached for a longer time, the constant changes in PH level can indeed soften the emulsion. So basically when you Bleach the film out there is no no need for this extra fix and the emulsion damage should be solved."
Here's where my observations disagree (Coming from Ilford Reversal Processing - a tad more DIY approach to reversal) as there's a definite density difference when leaving half of the roll unfixed and fixing the other half, keeping every other step the same.
It's the Potassium Permanganate Bleach that can damage the emulsion. To avoid it:
1) reduce concentration of it and keep bleach time the same. Underbleaching is easy to spot - looks like weird Solarization effect in shadows/darks/denser areas. Just hunt down bleach time to completion as there's no point in overbleaching one's film.
In my experience the median and starting point is 1/3 dilute Permanganate Bleach and 5 minutes bleach time with constant agitation and go from there.
2) fix your films happily away to obtain far more neutral tone, predictable black level/density and archival stability.
I'm uneasy with leaving my slides unfixed. If slides are really developed to max after 2nd developer, then why the stark differences - both measurable and obvious to the naked eye?
I tend to leave film unfixed only when:
- I want extra dense, warm/sepia slides or
- I've overexposed/overdeveloped my film and further reduction of black level is not advisable in hopes to have something of use - regardless of archival stability.
Projection heat and light levels stresses slides quite heavily - you probably want to ensure some archival stability if you want to project them often at the same fidelity,
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