- Joined
- Jul 7, 2014
- Messages
- 102
- Format
- 35mm
I know this sounds quaint.
I just developed my first roll of film since around 2008 or so. Funny enough, I knew I had some decent shots. and so I got the dark bag and got it ready, opened it up, struggled for only a short bit before getting the film into the spiral and rolled it into the spiral. Closing the tank up. Mixing a fresh batch of chemicals, ranging from the smelly fix and the yellowish Ilford stop. Finding out the thermometer that you own is as accurate as the news media, Carefully measuring out some 1+50 Rodinal, gauging 20 degrees C by hand, taking the plunge and pouring the developer into the tank and starting the timer. Stopping, fixing, the long wait as you do the wash.
Pull it out, and its that dark grey, pull out one and see clear images on the negative, you know that you haven't screwed up bad enough in your attempt that you ruined the film completely. Then hanging it to dry and waiting.
Its magical seeing those images on the film. Fixing a digital image in Photoshop just doesn't have the same awesome factor. Now I wonder why I ever stopped developing film.
- A happy analog photographer who smells like Fixer.
I will scan something, and most likely find out I have grain the size of marbles when it dries.
I just developed my first roll of film since around 2008 or so. Funny enough, I knew I had some decent shots. and so I got the dark bag and got it ready, opened it up, struggled for only a short bit before getting the film into the spiral and rolled it into the spiral. Closing the tank up. Mixing a fresh batch of chemicals, ranging from the smelly fix and the yellowish Ilford stop. Finding out the thermometer that you own is as accurate as the news media, Carefully measuring out some 1+50 Rodinal, gauging 20 degrees C by hand, taking the plunge and pouring the developer into the tank and starting the timer. Stopping, fixing, the long wait as you do the wash.
Pull it out, and its that dark grey, pull out one and see clear images on the negative, you know that you haven't screwed up bad enough in your attempt that you ruined the film completely. Then hanging it to dry and waiting.
Its magical seeing those images on the film. Fixing a digital image in Photoshop just doesn't have the same awesome factor. Now I wonder why I ever stopped developing film.
- A happy analog photographer who smells like Fixer.
I will scan something, and most likely find out I have grain the size of marbles when it dries.
Last edited by a moderator:

