Can you see the dust with the naked eye and/or a loupe?The same scanner scanned both films. One is hideously dusty, the other is spotless. I do not understand why.
Could the dust be due to the scanner or its film holders?
Can you see the dust with the naked eye and/or a loupe?The same scanner scanned both films. One is hideously dusty, the other is spotless. I do not understand why.
These films were developed in freshly prepared HC-110, Dilution E.
Ok, fixer then!
PE
RattyMouse, can you answer the previously posted question about the dust? Are the dust spots developed in the emulsion (now permanent), or can the film be cleaned of dust now post processed?
Once I got dust on the emulsion side of 120 film that came from a dirty bellows in an old folder. These yielded black spots on the print. There was no salvation for those negatives.
I like PE's suggestion to expose a fresh roll of another black and white film and process that in similar fashion and see what you get. Maybe try that with another roll of the Fuji film from the same batch (if you have it) at the same time. That might tell a story?
Was it partially used fixer? If so, as suggested above, if the 35mm film was on the bottom of the tank, then it could well have been contaminated by "dirty" fixer.
A lens from a 35mm SLR does a good job when it is used as a loupe.I dont have a loupe and so cannot inspect the film close up.
Are you sure that the 120 is absolutely clean also?
I think the 135 was on the bottom but can't recall for sure.Was the 35mm on the bottom in the tank or was the 120 on the bottom?

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