[pure-silver] Re: drips on roll film
- From: Shannon Stoney <shannonstoney@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- To: pure-silver@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
- Date: Fri, 30 Nov 2007 14:06:14 -0600
How long should you resoak the negatives in the wetting agent? I
rewashed them and then resoaked in wetting agent for about half a
minute. This didn't work. Maybe I should have soaked longer?
The film is Ilford HP5+ and FP4+, which is usually pretty reliable
film. Maybe my stop was too strong?
--shannon
On Nov 30, 2007, at 12:52 PM, Richard Knoppow wrote:
----- Original Message ----- From: "Shannon Stoney"
<shannonstoney@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: <pure-silver@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Friday, November 30, 2007 5:46 AM
Subject: [pure-silver] drips on roll film
I have some bad drips on some of my roll film that I processed
recently. I was shooting out in west texas where the sky is very
pristine so the drips are very obvious. I think it might have
something to do with the Photo flo. Like, maybe it was old or I
didn't dilute it right or something. The reason I suspect the photo
flo is that the drips run lengthwise on the film, not crossways,
which would suggest a problem with pouring in the developer, or the
stop or something.
Some of these negatives also have "holes" in the emulsion that print
black. Not sure what causes that except for rough handling; but I
was pretty gentle with them, I think.
Despite all these goofs, I got a few good images! I wonder how old I
will be before I stop inventing new ways to screw up my negatives.
--shannon
I also want to know what kind of film this was. Its the holes that
bother me because they suggest a coating problem in manufacture.
I use a final rinse made of Photo Flo and alcohol. The Photo Flo
is at about half the recommended strength and the alcohol is isopropyl
about 28ml of 99% or about 40ml of 70% per liter of rinse. If your
water is dirty or heavily mineral laden use distilled water. Soak the
film in this mixture for about 1 to 2 minutes and hang up to dry
without squeegeeing. The mixture is a sort of super wetting agent.
Streaking can come from a distortion of the emulsion from
differential drying. Sometimes this is permanent but often resoaking
the film in the wetting agent and re-drying will cure it.
Sometimes one gets so called water spots. These are mineral
deposits on the film usually in circular patterns around places water
droplets have dried. They are rare where a wetting agent has been
used. Water spots can often be removed by soaking the film in fresh
stop bath for a few minutes and re-washing. A citric acid stop bath
may be more effective.
The pin holes strongly suggest its the film not the processing.
---
Richard Knoppow
Los Angeles, CA, USA
dickburk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
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----- Original Message ----- From: "Shannon Stoney" <shannonstoney@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: <pure-silver@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Friday, November 30, 2007 5:46 AM Subject: [pure-silver] drips on roll film
I also want to know what kind of film this was. Its the holes that bother me because they suggest a coating problem in manufacture. I use a final rinse made of Photo Flo and alcohol. The Photo Flo is at about half the recommended strength and the alcohol is isopropyl about 28ml of 99% or about 40ml of 70% per liter of rinse. If your water is dirty or heavily mineral laden use distilled water. Soak the film in this mixture for about 1 to 2 minutes and hang up to dry without squeegeeing. The mixture is a sort of super wetting agent. Streaking can come from a distortion of the emulsion from differential drying. Sometimes this is permanent but often resoaking the film in the wetting agent and re-drying will cure it. Sometimes one gets so called water spots. These are mineral deposits on the film usually in circular patterns around places water droplets have dried. They are rare where a wetting agent has been used. Water spots can often be removed by soaking the film in fresh stop bath for a few minutes and re-washing. A citric acid stop bath may be more effective.I have some bad drips on some of my roll film that I processed recently. I was shooting out in west texas where the sky is very pristine so the drips are very obvious. I think it might have something to do with the Photo flo. Like, maybe it was old or I didn't dilute it right or something. The reason I suspect the photo flo is that the drips run lengthwise on the film, not crossways, which would suggest a problem with pouring in the developer, or the stop or something.Some of these negatives also have "holes" in the emulsion that print black. Not sure what causes that except for rough handling; but I was pretty gentle with them, I think.Despite all these goofs, I got a few good images! I wonder how old I will be before I stop inventing new ways to screw up my negatives.--shannon
The pin holes strongly suggest its the film not the processing.
---
Richard Knoppow
Los Angeles, CA, USA
dickburk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
=======================================================================
======================================
To unsubscribe from this list, go to www.freelists.org and logon to
your account (the same e-mail address and password you set-up when you
subscribed,) and unsubscribe from there.
- [pure-silver] Re: drips on roll film
- From: Richard Knoppow
- [pure-silver] Large Format Tilt
- From: C.Breukel
- [pure-silver] Re: Large Format Tilt
- From: Laurence Cuffe
- [pure-silver] Re: Large Format Tilt
- From: C.Breukel
- [pure-silver] Re: Large Format Tilt
- From: Nicholas O. Lindan
- [pure-silver] Re: Large Format Tilt
- From: Richard Knoppow
- [pure-silver] drips on roll film
- From: Shannon Stoney
- [pure-silver] Re: drips on roll film
- From: Richard Knoppow