ChristopherCoy
Subscriber
Make sure you have a LOADED reel before you start the development process. Yes I did. Developer, stop bath, fixer, and everything.
Check the floor under where you thought you loaded the reel.
Or alternatively, your other tanks, that you thought were empty.
I developed B&W in C-41 a little bit ago. Still got images but ya know...Stupid is as stupid be.
Also line up the chemicals in order before starting.
You're too young to be having memory issues like me. Now, what was the topic?
This is my favorite method. Seems quite obsessive but is quite necessary.Also line up the chemicals in order before starting.
That sounds like a lot of plates that needs spinning. Unless you’re talking stand.I don't measure out the next chemical until the film is in the current chemical.
But I do line up the bottles before starting.
Nah - I use continuous rotary agitation for all but the developing stage, so for all other stages I just pour in the chemical, set the timer and put the tank on to the agitator, which handles the rest of that stage, leaving me with time to pour the next solution into the 650ml graduate dedicated to that stage.That sounds like a lot of plates that needs spinning. Unless you’re talking stand.
Don't compound that one -- check your bleach/blix. If you got images, that step didn't work (at least not completely).
I was about ready to mail a Minolta Spotmeyer back to Japan. As I was getting ready to start the eBay return, after trying multiple batteries and pushing all the buttons ... I realized I was looking through it from the wrong side.
A couple of times i've forgotten to put the multi-exposure lever back to normal on my Bronica. I think i've shot the equivalent of a whole roll on 1 frame before I realised once.
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