Alex Benjamin
Subscriber
Didn't post this in the other Robert Adams thread, as it is film-development specific.
There's a passage regarding film development in American Silence: The Photographs of Robert Adams that piqued my curiosity. Talking about his apprenticeship with Myron Wood, a student of Edward Weston, the book states: "[Wood] helped Adams with his technique, showing him how to not only evaluate a contact sheet but also master a complicated method for developing negatives that produced smooth skies and delicately articulated clouds." That passage leads to the following footnote: "Adams described Woods method of developing negatives, which involved joining the ends of the film together and lifting it in and out of the developing solution... He noted that by developing his negatives this way, instead of in a tank, he no longer had streaked or mottled skies."
Anybody familiar with this? It somehow ressembles what is called "development by inspection", but I'm not sure if that's actually the case, might be something completely different. I don't know if Adams continued to used that method throughout his career, and couldn't find online the original interview in which he talks about it (Landscape magazine, 1980)
There's a passage regarding film development in American Silence: The Photographs of Robert Adams that piqued my curiosity. Talking about his apprenticeship with Myron Wood, a student of Edward Weston, the book states: "[Wood] helped Adams with his technique, showing him how to not only evaluate a contact sheet but also master a complicated method for developing negatives that produced smooth skies and delicately articulated clouds." That passage leads to the following footnote: "Adams described Woods method of developing negatives, which involved joining the ends of the film together and lifting it in and out of the developing solution... He noted that by developing his negatives this way, instead of in a tank, he no longer had streaked or mottled skies."
Anybody familiar with this? It somehow ressembles what is called "development by inspection", but I'm not sure if that's actually the case, might be something completely different. I don't know if Adams continued to used that method throughout his career, and couldn't find online the original interview in which he talks about it (Landscape magazine, 1980)