Film Heads
damonff
Registered Users Posts: 1,894 Major grins
I officially have the film bug as I am now developing my own color film at home. To all of you who are going back to film and want to develop at home, you can do it! Here are 2 examples from my second batch using a Tetenal Press Kit:
Contax G2, Kodak Gold 200 (expired 2004), Zeiss 45mm Planar f/2, Tetenal Press Kit (C41)
Contax G2, Kodak Gold 200 (expired 2004), Zeiss 45mm Planar f/2, Tetenal Press Kit (C41)
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I have the ingredients to process (I've had them for a while), so I have a feeling PM will be coming your way, but I'm lacking the thermometer, is this crucial?
I also don't have a dark room but I'm using a borrowed film bag and my reel is plastic not steel. Also do you save your ingredients in a seperate jar, or can you funnel them back into the same container?
As to your post, I like the color in these though I don't know if the black and white would be better. Also isn't color more difficult to develop?
I like the shots themselves, your mother is a classy stylish woman. I like how you have them "trained" to not even see or acknowledge your camera.
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Thermometer is crucial for color, but not really for b/w if your home is around 70 degrees and your chemicals are around that temperature. I use plastic reels as I have read that they are easier; I've not used steel. I load up the film in complete darkness in my dark bathroom, get the film in the tank, and then the lights can go back on for the rest of the development. For b/w I keep the fixer, but I dump the developer and the stop bath. I use either 1+1 D76 or 31+1 HC110 (Dilution . Both are fine. For color, I save everything, developer, blix, and stabilizer. They supposedly expire after around 20 rolls. I have only done 4 so far of the color. I keep all of the ingredients in brown glass bottles.
I am having a b/w versus color battle in my brain. I'm not sure which direction I will ultimately go in, but so far I'm having a lot of fun.
Color is actually easier to develop. It takes a shorter amount of time and, for me anyway, there's less mess. The only critical thing is that the chemicals need to be kept at around 102 degrees but this is easy to maintain in a bathtub with a thermometer.
... I'm still peeling potatoes.
patti hinton photography
Thanks!
I use an Epson V700. It does a really nice job.
I'm pretty sure temp is important for BW, also. Too warm, over-develop, too cold, under-develop. I recall that this was crucial, actually.
I remember spending a lot of time swizzling the thermometer in the vessel of D76 (1:1, as I recall.) I would first take the temp of the straight stuff, then add water that would get the temp just about right, then while it sat in a pan of water, added either hot water or cold to the pan to get the temp just right.
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Absolutely! It should be around 68-70 I think. Luckily, my chemicals seem to stay at that precise temperature in the cupboard.
That lens is darn nice, though.
Virginia
"A photograph is a secret about a secret. The more it tells you, the less you know." Diane Arbus
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Thanks Rutt. The Zeiss 45 will keep me shooting film. The chemicals are fun. I need to get an enlarger at some point and print.
Thanks Virginia. The palette is all thanks to the C41 kit. I am still experimenting. They are straight from my shower to the scanner.