Question
First of all forget about the background..........well no don't forget about the background, its the neg I want to talk about. With regards to the stupid background, that shit aint going to happen again, I WILL in future make sure that I have the correct size background to fill the frame.
You can see I have got these horrible vertical lines on the neg, initially I thought it was due to the defused window light coming through the net curtains, you know the ones I mean )see attached picture
And with the exposure being over 1 minute (1 min 17 seconds) to be precise I am thinking that that is the reason for these horrible lines is due to the curtains.
Then to my horror I thought about this some more and I am now thinking that it could possibly be coming from the developing process. I'm developing in trays in my dark room and the trays are the normal 8x10 trans from B&H that have channels in the bottom so that it is easy to get the neg out. I use 1 ltr of each of the chemicals so I think there is plenty of liquid in the tray, I also shake the trays to get some turbulent flow. Maybe the lines are due to the uneven developing of the neg (god forbid).............is that possible or am I just over thinking this shit??
I will be able to fix the background in PS, but not so sure I can do that in the darkroom (make burn in a vinaigrette)........theres one thing for sure I will try and do something with it in the dark room
Heres the Neg, and later I will post the finished print
First of all forget about the background..........well no don't forget about the background, its the neg I want to talk about. With regards to the stupid background, that shit aint going to happen again, I WILL in future make sure that I have the correct size background to fill the frame.
You can see I have got these horrible vertical lines on the neg, initially I thought it was due to the defused window light coming through the net curtains, you know the ones I mean )see attached picture
And with the exposure being over 1 minute (1 min 17 seconds) to be precise I am thinking that that is the reason for these horrible lines is due to the curtains.
Then to my horror I thought about this some more and I am now thinking that it could possibly be coming from the developing process. I'm developing in trays in my dark room and the trays are the normal 8x10 trans from B&H that have channels in the bottom so that it is easy to get the neg out. I use 1 ltr of each of the chemicals so I think there is plenty of liquid in the tray, I also shake the trays to get some turbulent flow. Maybe the lines are due to the uneven developing of the neg (god forbid).............is that possible or am I just over thinking this shit??
I will be able to fix the background in PS, but not so sure I can do that in the darkroom (make burn in a vinaigrette)........theres one thing for sure I will try and do something with it in the dark room
Heres the Neg, and later I will post the finished print

.
????
....
.... = strange to imagine