Kev M
Suspended / Banned
- Messages
- 4,347
- Name
- You can call me Sir.
- Edit My Images
- Yes
Afternoon all. I just wanted to check my understanding to try and figure out what has happened.
I was shooting some sailing the other night and the light was crap. Only had 400 film so decided to rate it at 800 to give me a half sensible shutter speed, never pushed a film before.
I developed the negatives at home with a new developer (DD-X, normally use Ilfosol3) and instead of my usual see-through negatives they were dense, really dense. They did however have areas which were see-through still.
Despite my pushing the development one stop (and maybe a bit more as temperature didn't fall away as quickly as I thought it would) are the see-through areas see through because there simply wan't enough exposure to record the detail and so increasing the development would have made no difference to that particular area?
I started printing from one of the negatives at the weekend and even at Grade 0 it was hard work. These are going to be tricky:bang:
I was shooting some sailing the other night and the light was crap. Only had 400 film so decided to rate it at 800 to give me a half sensible shutter speed, never pushed a film before.
I developed the negatives at home with a new developer (DD-X, normally use Ilfosol3) and instead of my usual see-through negatives they were dense, really dense. They did however have areas which were see-through still.
Despite my pushing the development one stop (and maybe a bit more as temperature didn't fall away as quickly as I thought it would) are the see-through areas see through because there simply wan't enough exposure to record the detail and so increasing the development would have made no difference to that particular area?
I started printing from one of the negatives at the weekend and even at Grade 0 it was hard work. These are going to be tricky:bang:
