Flying Penguin
Suspended / Banned
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- 125
- Name
- Jamie
- Edit My Images
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Hi all,
Having only just made the jump to film, I'm getting a bit confused by the information available on Fomapan 200 and I was hoping someone might be able to shed some light on my problem.
My first roll of Fomapan 200 was exposed as for ISO 200 and developed, per the recipe on digitaltruth.com, in ID-11 at 1+3 for 12 minutes. It came out ok I guess, if a little grainer than I hoped for, but I was only shooting the same kitchen scene over and over again to calibrate the focus on my Trip 35 so I didn't really have much to compare it to.
Digging a little further, it appears from reading up that Fomapan 200 is nearer ISO 125 and should be exposed and developed as such. That the actual speed is nearer 125 doesn't seem to be disputed, but it does mean I'm now thoroughly stumped as to developing
If I expose as for ISO 125 film, should I be lengthening or shortening the development time? The Digitaltruth charts assume a speed rating of 200. Am I likely to see any other side effects from this change in speed?
Also, is there any useful reference for film development theory? I've found lots of partial references, none of which seem to be complete or deal with reading the graphs on the data sheet.
Sorry if this is all horribly basic, I'm going round in circles here
Cheers,
Jamie
Having only just made the jump to film, I'm getting a bit confused by the information available on Fomapan 200 and I was hoping someone might be able to shed some light on my problem.
My first roll of Fomapan 200 was exposed as for ISO 200 and developed, per the recipe on digitaltruth.com, in ID-11 at 1+3 for 12 minutes. It came out ok I guess, if a little grainer than I hoped for, but I was only shooting the same kitchen scene over and over again to calibrate the focus on my Trip 35 so I didn't really have much to compare it to.
Digging a little further, it appears from reading up that Fomapan 200 is nearer ISO 125 and should be exposed and developed as such. That the actual speed is nearer 125 doesn't seem to be disputed, but it does mean I'm now thoroughly stumped as to developing
If I expose as for ISO 125 film, should I be lengthening or shortening the development time? The Digitaltruth charts assume a speed rating of 200. Am I likely to see any other side effects from this change in speed?
Also, is there any useful reference for film development theory? I've found lots of partial references, none of which seem to be complete or deal with reading the graphs on the data sheet.
Sorry if this is all horribly basic, I'm going round in circles here
Cheers,
Jamie