Dear APUG Members,
I have worked for several photographers who shot medium and large format and would use the following for high visibility Gallery quality photos, I have shot B+W for 4 decades and followed similar chemical guidelines when it comes to film processing...
a) D76 1:1 with FP4
b) Rodinal with Tri X
c) Xtol with Tmax and PanF
I wonder when does one decide that a particular shot needs stand development?
I know Kodak and Ilford and Adox has spent millions on R+D to bring us consistently good results,
why go outside the margin, what really is to be gained? The attempts I have made with it on 120 film
and 4x5 is a rather muddy, mottled result. As my grandfather used to say, "Time is Money" and you have
just wasted another hour....if you can get a perfectly useable negative in 12 minutes or less, why increase
risk of base fog while souping for an hour...or more.....?
What is the criteria for an image to go thru stand development?
I get that you don't want to burn out the highlights and pickup a few lumens in the shadows...but at what cost.
I don't have much graded #4 paper left anyway....
If Modern Photography were still alive, on the cover they might address it as follows....
"Stand Development" the process de jour..?
Please enlighten me.....
Thanks
Harlequin
I have worked for several photographers who shot medium and large format and would use the following for high visibility Gallery quality photos, I have shot B+W for 4 decades and followed similar chemical guidelines when it comes to film processing...
a) D76 1:1 with FP4
b) Rodinal with Tri X
c) Xtol with Tmax and PanF
I wonder when does one decide that a particular shot needs stand development?
I know Kodak and Ilford and Adox has spent millions on R+D to bring us consistently good results,
why go outside the margin, what really is to be gained? The attempts I have made with it on 120 film
and 4x5 is a rather muddy, mottled result. As my grandfather used to say, "Time is Money" and you have
just wasted another hour....if you can get a perfectly useable negative in 12 minutes or less, why increase
risk of base fog while souping for an hour...or more.....?
What is the criteria for an image to go thru stand development?
I get that you don't want to burn out the highlights and pickup a few lumens in the shadows...but at what cost.
I don't have much graded #4 paper left anyway....
If Modern Photography were still alive, on the cover they might address it as follows....
"Stand Development" the process de jour..?
Please enlighten me.....
Thanks
Harlequin



