Shot my first roll of 35mm in quite a while earlier in the week, and I am really quite disappointed in the results. They all seem very grainy and are nowhere near as sharp as I had expected. I was using a Canon EOS 5 with EF 17-40L lens. The film was Delta 100 developed in Rodinal 1+50.
As far as I can tell, there could be three main areas where I've screwed this up:
Think I might have gone a bit overboard with all the info... But I'm trying to find all the areas where I may have a problem. As far as I can tell, the most likely reasons are: expired developer, over agitation, poor temp control or perhaps it's just me expecting too much after shooting 120 B&W.
I'm going to shoot some more FP4 over the weekend (don't have any more Delta) and I'm going to try and straighten my developing technique out a bit more, taking a bit more time and paying more attention to details. Just wondering if anyone can see any reasons why the images (which have had no sharpening or grain reduction in PP) are so grainy and blurry.
Thanks!

As far as I can tell, there could be three main areas where I've screwed this up:
- At the taking stage:
- Issue with the lens- This seems unlikely as I was using a modern EF 14-70 L lens, which I know to be very good as I've used it for a few years on my digi gear.
- Issue with the camera- It's just a box between the lens and film, so providing the shutter speeds are accurate can it really cause an issue?
- Exposure error- All were taken on aperture priority with centre weighted metering. Looking at the negs there is a nice range of tones. None of the frames appear to be nearly black or nearly clear so I guess the exposure is pretty good.
- Camera settings- Typically shot fairly wide, mostly 17-24mm. I was shooting mainly between f/8 and f/16. I don't think its a DoF issue causing the blur as even f/8 at 24mm is a deep DoF.
- At the developing stage: (I think this is where the problem lies)
- Developer- I used Rodinal (think its actually Adanol, but it's to the Rodinal formula) 1+50 for 14 minutes, as per the MDC. I know this is high acutance developer which increases grain, but even so there's more grain that I'd expect from Delta 100! I've had the Rodinal for quite a while (a year maybe?) and it's gone very dark brown. From reading elsewhere it seems that this stuff lasts for years and goes almost black, but is still useable. Wonder if I need fresh developer?
- Stop bath and fixer- No idea if this can have any affect, but I'll list it anyway. Ilfostop and some Ilford Rapid Fixer which is fairly old. There's a hint of yellow to it but I tested the film leader immediately before and it cleared in 35 seconds. My actual fix time was 5 mins.
- Temperature- I use ambient temp water from the tap for the developer, as it's pretty warm at the moment. I don't check any temperatures at any point in the process because I figured it must be fairly warm in the house, and from what I've read B&W doesn't really need to be too temp critical
- Agitation- Usually I use the "twisty stick" to agitate. One minute continuous and then ten seconds every minute thereafter. After each period of agitation I give the tank two small taps on the sink to dislodge any bubbles. This time was slightly different however, as for some reason I was concerned about using a small reel in a big tank, so I also gave the tank a little swish round before I tapped it each time. Could this extra agitation cause extra grain?
- Washing- Washed in running tap water for 8-10 mins. After that I rinsed it finally in filtered water to prevent water spots.
- Drying- After rinsing in filtered water I remove the spool which is still attached to the tube, and holding the top end of the tube I kind of flick my wrist to try and get as much water off as I can. Then I take the film off and hang it in the shower with a bulldog clip.
- At the scanning stage:
- Using a V550. Tried VueScan and EPSON Scan, both give me grainy images which are unsharp (I'd actually say they're a bit blurry). Could it just be a case of using a flatbed scanner for 35mm and expecting too much from it?
Think I might have gone a bit overboard with all the info... But I'm trying to find all the areas where I may have a problem. As far as I can tell, the most likely reasons are: expired developer, over agitation, poor temp control or perhaps it's just me expecting too much after shooting 120 B&W.
I'm going to shoot some more FP4 over the weekend (don't have any more Delta) and I'm going to try and straighten my developing technique out a bit more, taking a bit more time and paying more attention to details. Just wondering if anyone can see any reasons why the images (which have had no sharpening or grain reduction in PP) are so grainy and blurry.
Thanks!




