Black and white film development for beautiful negatives

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  • čas přidán 12. 06. 2024
  • If you would like to support this channel and continue to see future content like this, please consider making a small donation: distphoto.be/support_the_channel
    Grab a free copy of my darkroom formula ebook when you signup for my newsletter here: www.distphoto.com/darkroomfor...
    There are many different black and white film developing techniques you can use. I go over one that has given me repeatable even density negatives with great contrast for printing. Developing black and white film does not have to be difficult! The key is find something that works for you and be consistent with it!
    Have fun in the dark!
    =============================
    Relevant Links:
    =============================
    The Darkroom Cookbook - ebay.us/qn8Hg6
    Black and white film developer used - ID-11 - amzn.to/3qpUck1
    Black and white film used - Ilford FP4 - adorama.rfvk.net/9bd3E
    Stainless steel black and white film developing tank - amzn.to/36nTPyQ
    Kodak Photoflo - amzn.to/39vytS5
    Monitoring silver levels in your fixer - AG Test Strips - amzn.to/2MyzW14
    =============================
    Go to film photography setup //
    =============================
    Hasselblad 500 CM - ebay.us/I76k2J
    120mm CF f-4 Makro - ebay.us/gX4UVm
    80mm CF 2.8 - ebay.us/BRBAuT
    50mm CFE f-4 - ebay.us/rcJhiz
    Go to film - Ilford HP5 - adorama.rfvk.net/5XEzo
    =============================
    Go to digital camera setup //
    =============================
    Canon R5 - amzn.to/35FUX0r
    Canon 35mm f1.4 L ii - amzn.to/3ioIBPl
    Canon 50mm f1.2 RF - amzn.to/2N47Hax
    Canon 85mm f1.2 - amzn.to/38PaH34
    =============================
    Music:
    =============================
    All the songs in my videos are from Epidemic Sound! - Get your music here - www.epidemicsound.com/referra...
    =============================
    Affiliate Links:
    =============================
    Some of the links in my video descriptions are affiliate links, which means at no extra cost to you, I will make a small commission if you click them and make a qualifying purchase. If you have a different purchase in mind, please consider using these links as it helps create more free content for this channel!
    =============================
    Follow Me:
    =============================
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    Lightroom Presets: www.distinctionphoto.com/dp/p...
    Blog: www.distinctionphoto.com/dp/c...
    Thank you so much for watching!
    =============================
    #distphotofilm #darkroom
  • Jak na to + styl

Komentáře • 196

  • @MichaelLloyd
    @MichaelLloyd Před 3 lety +7

    The first time I loaded 120 I did it in a change tent. When I took the drum out of the tent I was rewarded with my exposed film laying in the bottom of the tent... yup... rolled the paper onto the reel...

    • @DistinctionPhotoLLC
      @DistinctionPhotoLLC  Před 3 lety +3

      Hah! 😂 That really made me laugh! Sorry that must have sucked at the time but been pretty funny at the same time!

    • @MichaelLloyd
      @MichaelLloyd Před 3 lety +1

      @@DistinctionPhotoLLC For a few seconds it sucked but yeah... It didn't take but a minute or two to crack me up. I still laugh about it. I'm just glad that I didn't waster developer on the paper :o)

    • @IncendiaHL
      @IncendiaHL Před 2 měsíci

      Looool

  • @JonnySchaab
    @JonnySchaab Před 6 měsíci +4

    Been ten years since I’ve developed my own film and this was such a great refresher. Thanks so much for all the archival insights as well!!

  • @Morganna_Nikolaevna
    @Morganna_Nikolaevna Před měsícem +1

    I wanted to learn how to develop B&W film myself, and your video was the most helpful one I watched on explaining the entire process! Thanks!

  • @mikesutton1548
    @mikesutton1548 Před 2 lety +3

    Thanks for the great video. I did darkroom for a living, but it’s been almost 24 years and I needed a refresher. I will say I developed hundreds of rolls of black and white and never had issues pouring through the light tight cap, I think consistency is key whichever way one goes. I’ve dried film in the shower before, but I never thought to run hot water first to knock the dust down, that’s a stroke of genius.

    • @DistinctionPhotoLLC
      @DistinctionPhotoLLC  Před 2 lety +1

      Thanks! I think for me dropping the reels in has a lot more to do with peace of mind as well. I had noticed slightly uneven clear skies in the past . ( can not directly correlate it with pouring through the lid or not) but do find it easier to be consistent with the start and stop times and feel it is (all be it, just a tad ) more precise. Like you say though consistency is definitely key!

  • @DessieTots
    @DessieTots Před 3 lety +22

    Thank you for:
    a) not wearing a baseball cap backwards
    b) not saying “what’s happenin, etc”
    c) not droning on for ages before getting to the point
    d) uploading this video
    e) you’re welcome
    P.S. I’ve been using a salad spinner to remove excess water from the films before hanging. I just glued a spare plastic core to the base of the basket and slide the film reel onto it, put the lid on and spin.
    Suggestion: would it not be easier to fit a filtration system between the water supply and tap instead of using distilled water?

    • @DistinctionPhotoLLC
      @DistinctionPhotoLLC  Před 3 lety

      Thank you! love the salad spinner idea. Yes I suppose I could just use the filtered water in my darkroom. I currently have a bunch of distilled water so may as well use it up.

    • @AustenGoldsmithPhotography
      @AustenGoldsmithPhotography Před 2 lety

      F- Thanks for not being sponsored by square space !

  • @tomsawyer8802
    @tomsawyer8802 Před 3 lety +5

    Really well explained! I develop my film for about 5 years now but I was hoping for a channel like yours since 2015. Your knowledge is on a high level, no question about it! Thank you very much for sharing!

  • @joseerazevedo
    @joseerazevedo Před 2 lety

    Thanks for the video. Always nice to see something that reminds us if what we're doing is the right way. Your assistant's face watching you take the film from the reel is incredible! My best!

    • @DistinctionPhotoLLC
      @DistinctionPhotoLLC  Před 2 lety +2

      Definitely more than one way to do it “right” whatever gets you the results you are after! Thanks for watching

  • @TroyGlover
    @TroyGlover Před 2 lety

    Great video man! Really inspiring setup you have there. Thanks for sharing your knowledge and experience with us!

  • @titofly00
    @titofly00 Před 3 lety +1

    the timing for me finding your channel couldnt be better, I've just bought a full developing kit yesterday and I am gonna develop my film for the first time by next week maybe and this was veeery helpful, thanks a lot.

  • @gianlucapompanin9314
    @gianlucapompanin9314 Před 3 lety +3

    Awesome video. Been developing/printing on my own for about a year now but there is still so much to learn and these videos have been so great! Keep it up 🤟🤟🤟

  • @andreascaveman
    @andreascaveman Před 3 lety +1

    Great contribution! There is lots of big and small tips here, and very refreshing to see you using a steel tank! As always, looking forward to your next video!

  • @michaelbailey1578
    @michaelbailey1578 Před 3 lety +1

    That was well done and very helpful. Thank you.

  • @carlitodcreative
    @carlitodcreative Před rokem

    You are DA man, great technique

  • @jimreinhart9539
    @jimreinhart9539 Před 3 lety +1

    Enjoyed this much it’s been a long time since I’ve been in the darkroom developing and processing I’m putting thought into creating a darkroom and printing. Seeing your water area is a really good thing fir me to see Thank you.

  • @johnbreedlove9729
    @johnbreedlove9729 Před rokem

    Nice tutorial. I needed a refresher as I'm heading back into the darkroom after many many years. Nice darkroom setup.

  • @Larpy1933
    @Larpy1933 Před rokem

    Thanks. I agree with your method of using a second fixing stage.

    • @DistinctionPhotoLLC
      @DistinctionPhotoLLC  Před rokem

      Yeah, I've done it this way for a while even though I had never seen it referenced anywhere but with prints. I just find it a really easy way to make sure the negs are getting fresh fix everytime and also easy to monitor the silver levels of the first fix. Thanks for watching!

  • @jonmnelson
    @jonmnelson Před 3 lety +1

    Really helpful video. Thank you! And your helper is wonderful. I miss those years with my kids.

  • @nelsono4315
    @nelsono4315 Před 8 měsíci

    excellent video. Thank You!

  • @alexanderdobroruka8534
    @alexanderdobroruka8534 Před rokem +2

    Great channel man. I just discovered your videos a few days ago and they're some of the most informative and well put-together vids on this platform. I've been developing my own film for about a year now and just printed in my home darkroom for the first time last Sunday. Will definitely be returning to your videos for sage advice often down the road. Keep it up bud!

    • @DistinctionPhotoLLC
      @DistinctionPhotoLLC  Před rokem +1

      So great to hear!!! Let me know if you need any help or have ideas/topics for vids you would like me to cover!

    • @alexanderdobroruka8534
      @alexanderdobroruka8534 Před rokem

      @@DistinctionPhotoLLCThanks will do!

  • @jonathanraven5939
    @jonathanraven5939 Před 3 lety +1

    Excellent information, thank you.

  • @lucbeliveau3977
    @lucbeliveau3977 Před 3 lety +1

    I had never seen the way you pour the developer and the stop into the tank in complete darkness, a real pro tip! Hope to see your next videos, maybe one about printing a contrast negative using preflashing paper?.

  • @mcmillanvideos
    @mcmillanvideos Před 11 měsíci

    Thanks for making this. Seems like you covered all the things I remember from when I was doing film photography years ago. (and brought back some memories) I'm getting back into it now. I was mostly into small format... but just got a used Mamiya 645 and plan to go shootin' soon. I found this to be a great tutorial, thank you!
    One thing that I remembered is that bending the film as you thread it onto the reel can put little v's into the film/image area if you mis-align, over bend, etc. It can happen with 35 but I've never done it... but I have seen people make these mistakes in school. I've done it with 120 the first time. Your daughter is awesome. I did love her face as you pulled the film off the reel. Classic. I have 2 boys that have very little interest or attention span for lab work... so that was really nice to see.
    Oh, and you have a spectacular darkroom.. Very well thought-out. Your video production and processing techniques all follow suit.. clear, efficient and deliberate. Great work all around!

    • @DistinctionPhotoLLC
      @DistinctionPhotoLLC  Před 11 měsíci +1

      Thank you, appreciate it! You can definitely put kinks in the film if you are too aggressive or it starts going on cooked... don't force it. back it off carefully and realign correctly with patience and practice it becomes very easy.
      Mamiya's are great cameras, have fun!

  • @richardsimms251
    @richardsimms251 Před rokem +1

    Very, very high quality educational video. Thank you. RS. Canada

  • @IainHC1
    @IainHC1 Před 3 lety +2

    Great video :-) Solid technique :-) Your daughter had fun in there........ Hopefully she'll have a darkroom of her own one day :-)

  • @standarduser7105
    @standarduser7105 Před 2 lety

    135 and 120 Hewes’ Reels are absolutely amazing, simplistic and satisfying when unwound.

    • @DistinctionPhotoLLC
      @DistinctionPhotoLLC  Před 2 lety +1

      I agree. For me they are the best. I have Jobo tanks and have used Patterson but much prefer the Hewes 👍

  • @nickdattner8680
    @nickdattner8680 Před 8 měsíci

    Great instructions.

  • @stevensakic4342
    @stevensakic4342 Před 2 lety

    Thank you, for sharing your darkroom technique., for negative development. i did my own development before digital , and now I am enlightened to go back
    to shoot film and do my own darkroom printing.

    • @DistinctionPhotoLLC
      @DistinctionPhotoLLC  Před 2 lety

      I love digital and analog. I truly believe that one makes me better at the other. Also gives me a break from shooting the same all the time. Give it a go 👍

  • @CD-kc5op
    @CD-kc5op Před 10 měsíci

    Great video!

  • @andrelachaine160
    @andrelachaine160 Před rokem

    Verry good video: Here is my experience. I have been using photo-flo 200 for years and when the film comes out of the tank after washing with photo-flo 200 I have never touched the film with a squeegee, sponge, or anything else letting the film drying by itself. The film comes out with no trace of residue and is beautiful. I tried the experiment of removing the water with my fingers and the results were disastrous. The film after drying came out damaged. So, for me it may be best to let the film dry on its own without intervening. Keep up the good work.

    • @DistinctionPhotoLLC
      @DistinctionPhotoLLC  Před rokem

      Thanks Andre, I have also found for me the most important thing is to rinse well with distilled water to remove mineral residue. Have seen people do a lot of different things to get the results they are after!

  • @davidurton9875
    @davidurton9875 Před 3 lety +1

    thanks for the good video, very informative .

  • @kangaroogroundboy
    @kangaroogroundboy Před rokem

    Nice to see the next generation of analog people coming along. Just developed first couple of rolls of 35mm since 1988. Your video handy reminder, though once I smelt the stop bath it all came back. Hope you're keeping warm, hi from London

    • @DistinctionPhotoLLC
      @DistinctionPhotoLLC  Před rokem

      Yes , very cool to see. I have a feeling with all this AI getting more and more into photography more will be switching to film.... Oh that reminded me when I was younger I was an idiot and put my nose to the stop to see what it was... NEVER do that again... Cheers!

  • @Callmedstone
    @Callmedstone Před 3 lety +2

    This was both super interesting and entertaining. I don’t know how you managed to dad and develop at the same time. I find the thought of developing my own film extremely daunting! One day!

    • @DistinctionPhotoLLC
      @DistinctionPhotoLLC  Před 3 lety

      It really is pretty easy once you do it a few times! Kinda like riding a bike! Thanks for watching!

    • @kangaroogroundboy
      @kangaroogroundboy Před rokem

      I taught myself out of school book when I was a kid...trust me, if I can do it, anyone can😉

  • @DannerPlace
    @DannerPlace Před 56 minutami

    Your content it just excellent.

  • @photomaster1
    @photomaster1 Před 3 lety +1

    Thank you for good info.

  • @mikoajstarzynski3738
    @mikoajstarzynski3738 Před 3 lety +1

    great tip with steaming bathroom before hanging the negatives ;) thanks!

  • @Wherefrostreignlabelpress

    Thanks!

  • @pd1jdw630
    @pd1jdw630 Před 4 měsíci

    Good to see kids have an interest in photo chemistry.

  • @timjones8312
    @timjones8312 Před 3 lety +3

    Great video of the steps. One little trick I use after the PhotoFlo wash is to put the reel in a salad spinner and give it a good spin. Film comes out with virtually no water drops on it.

    • @DistinctionPhotoLLC
      @DistinctionPhotoLLC  Před 3 lety

      Nice. Do you just put the whole reel in? And spin away?

    • @timjones8312
      @timjones8312 Před 3 lety +1

      @@DistinctionPhotoLLC Yes. The film plane at 90 degrees to the side of the spinner basket . If I have one reel to do, I put a small piece of wood about the same weight as the reel on the opposite side to balance it and away you go. Centrifugal force is a wonderful thing :)

    • @DistinctionPhotoLLC
      @DistinctionPhotoLLC  Před 3 lety

      @@timjones8312 Thank you! Just have to find one now 🤔 I like this idea as for really important work lately I do not even touch the film just hang. It can sometimes have water marks (easily cleaned off) but this should eliminate that altogether!

    • @timjones8312
      @timjones8312 Před 3 lety

      @@DistinctionPhotoLLC In Australia I got mine from Ikea. Sold as "Tokig" $A5. Not sure if you have them in the US (surely, they're everywhere!) but any of the big retail chains will probably stock them.

  • @PBR23n
    @PBR23n Před 9 měsíci

    I just came across your channel yesterday and this is the 6th video I've watched. Really great content & easy to follow. I've been developing at home for 15 years but printing off & on. But... 30 seconds to load developer? Through the cap should be 12-14 seconds with the perfect angle and speed. LOL!

    • @DistinctionPhotoLLC
      @DistinctionPhotoLLC  Před 9 měsíci

      Thanks Peter…. Yeah I guess it depends on the size of the tanks too. Been awhile since I timed it but remember it taking me long enough to be a concern for short development times around 5 min. At this time even 10-15 seconds could cause unevenness. Less of a concern with longer times and if you have results you love than keep doing what works for you 👍

  • @karmatopden3417
    @karmatopden3417 Před rokem

    Thanks

  • @mendezproductions
    @mendezproductions Před 3 lety +1

    That’s amazing
    I need to start saving some money for my Darkroom!! I know it is no cheap to do it, Greetings!!

    • @DistinctionPhotoLLC
      @DistinctionPhotoLLC  Před 3 lety

      Go for it! Perfect place to spend in quarantine :) But seriously you do not need a ton to get started. You can find used darkroom stuff for super cheap and even free all over the place!

  • @richardsimms251
    @richardsimms251 Před 16 dny +1

    Excellent video

  • @stephensmith8325
    @stephensmith8325 Před 3 lety +1

    I enjoy your careful processes. Actually Ilford recommends the following washing method: "Fill the tank with water and invert it five times. Drain the water away and refill. Invert the tank ten times. Once more drain the water away and refill. Finally invert the tank twenty times and drain the water away." This uses less water and is faster.

    • @DistinctionPhotoLLC
      @DistinctionPhotoLLC  Před 3 lety +1

      Good point! I have always used running water for 10 min, It allows me to straighten up while washing. But you are correct Ilford does recommend the fill and dump method. I am wondering if it has any affect on quality at all. I would think not as long as temps are the same.
      I do fill a tray and dump five times for 4x5 tray process sheet film 👍
      Thanks!

  • @erchata
    @erchata Před rokem

    suscrito un saludo desde BARCELONA ESPAÑA.

  • @BasementShopGuy
    @BasementShopGuy Před 2 lety

    Loved this - super helpful Thank you. What power Loupe are you using in this video?

    • @DistinctionPhotoLLC
      @DistinctionPhotoLLC  Před 2 lety

      Glad it was helpful! The one I use is a peak 10x. Def better loupes out there but this has always done a fine job for me!

  • @markfisher299
    @markfisher299 Před rokem

    Good stuff

  • @FTropper
    @FTropper Před rokem +1

    If you are like me two years ago, don't worry so much about this video. Just buy some cheap film like Foma or Kentmere, shoot some average picture (so it doesn't matter if you screw it up) and start developing. Don't worry about perfect times, temperate and agitation. After you did it a couple of times and you realized how easy the basic process is, start watching videos like this start to perfect your development process. Learn from my mistake: I postponed trying film several month because it sounded so complicated - and I can assure you: it is not! If you just want to shoot some pictures, develop it and scan it, it is super easy!

    • @DistinctionPhotoLLC
      @DistinctionPhotoLLC  Před rokem +2

      I do agree with you to a big extent. This process is not complicated and certainly do not want to put anyone off from trying.
      I do have to point out that if you are scanning film it is a much different thing than if you are printing in the darkroom.
      If you plan to print in the darkroom my advice would be to start good habits from the start. (Actually I would suggest that either way) If your negative contrast is all over the place and you have no idea why it will cause more headaches and confusion in the long run.
      I still feel the whole process is very simple even with controlling temp and time.
      Appreciate the feedback!

    • @FTropper
      @FTropper Před rokem

      @@DistinctionPhotoLLC I get your point and you are completely right. 🙂My only point was that your advice is for people who already did develop a couple of rolls of film and not for somebody who haven't.

  • @theoldfilmbloke
    @theoldfilmbloke Před rokem

    i use 2 Fixers as well ! It gets 3 times the working life out of the solutions. To test Fixer 1 I use 4% Potassium Iodide - a drop in a small few drops of Fix - if there is a Yellow Precipitate the Fix is full of Silver.

    • @DistinctionPhotoLLC
      @DistinctionPhotoLLC  Před rokem

      Thanks for the tip! Nice to know, I use the test strips but can be expensive at times and hard to source 👍

  • @shanelson1
    @shanelson1 Před 4 měsíci

    Great info! I’m debating buying Ilford chemistry or Kodak.

  • @anderstollestrup
    @anderstollestrup Před rokem

    Very well explained and super educational. I leaned a lot from this video and I better dive into your other stuff here on CZcams.
    One question: Should I stay on brand developers or is Ilford okay to develop Kodak Tri-X films ?

    • @DistinctionPhotoLLC
      @DistinctionPhotoLLC  Před rokem

      You do not have to stay on brand. Ilford and Kodak both make great developers and can be used with all B&W films (except c-41 process B&W films)
      I commonly develop Ilford HP5 in Kodak HC110 with great results 👍

  • @terrywbreedlove
    @terrywbreedlove Před 3 lety +1

    You are like the opposite of me. Your attention to detail is so impressive. I am like a Bull in a China shop. Maybe why your prints are so damn good 👍🏻

    • @DistinctionPhotoLLC
      @DistinctionPhotoLLC  Před 3 lety +1

      Thanks. Trying to slow down for the process is the tough part. especially when you have a busy schedule. Time seems to stand still sometimes. Then I open the door and eight hours have went by...

  • @bernardkelly235
    @bernardkelly235 Před 3 lety +1

    Good advice throughout. Will start agitating that entire first minute from now on. Would like to see how you scan the negatives.

    • @DistinctionPhotoLLC
      @DistinctionPhotoLLC  Před 3 lety +1

      Thank you! I use a Epson v850 and will try to make a vid on how I use it 👍

  • @dalehammond1749
    @dalehammond1749 Před rokem

    It's so refreshing to see a video favoring the steel reels. Overall a great video! In my opinion, darkroom prints are the only real photos.

    • @DistinctionPhotoLLC
      @DistinctionPhotoLLC  Před rokem +1

      Thanks, been using the steel reels for as long as I can remember. In my opinion they are just far superior. Darkroom prints are definitely 💯 real deal!

  • @marcseghatol6583
    @marcseghatol6583 Před 9 měsíci

    Great

  • @NoosaHeads
    @NoosaHeads Před rokem

    Wiping the film (after rinsing) using a wetted Plas Chamois (ie synthetic chamois) gives excellent spot free results.

    • @DistinctionPhotoLLC
      @DistinctionPhotoLLC  Před rokem

      Never tried that but am looking for a better way with my color film. Been meaning to try the salad spinner. But have limited space & storage. Will see if I can source a synthetic chamois 👍

  • @randallstewart175
    @randallstewart175 Před 2 lety

    A couple of tips on using stainless steel reels and tanks. Reels made out of relatively thick wire are far easier to load than those with thin wire. Thick wire units would be the Nikor items from the 1950s/60s (ebay, fairly cheap), or for new, Hewes (sit down for the prices). For tanks, the steel tanks with flexible plastic tops and caps. The early (until the mid-60s) Nikors used a fitted steel top and cap, which tended to leak a bit. The ones with plastic tops do not leak at all.

    • @DistinctionPhotoLLC
      @DistinctionPhotoLLC  Před rokem

      I have the Nikkor tanks and lids as well and will not mess with the steel lids.... To messy. My plastic lids still leak a little.

  • @mathewmccarthy9848
    @mathewmccarthy9848 Před 3 lety +1

    Well done. Thank you. Do you reuse your fixer and stop?

    • @DistinctionPhotoLLC
      @DistinctionPhotoLLC  Před 3 lety

      Yes I do! For the fixer I monitor the silver levels with the AG strips. then I know it needs to be replaced. With the stop bath turns a purple color when it is spent and needs to be replaced.

  • @nicasiosanchez1621
    @nicasiosanchez1621 Před 2 měsíci

    Yesterday I had a dream that I was processing undeveloped film that is over 15. I have the same tanks as you in your video. I don’t know if it will work, I used your video a refresher. Let’s see what’s developed.

    • @DistinctionPhotoLLC
      @DistinctionPhotoLLC  Před 2 měsíci

      I imagine it would be fine if the film was not subject to any harsh conditions. Might have some fogging but I have developed color film that was a lot older than that and was still useable and some frames quite unique colors and what not

  • @riswanc
    @riswanc Před 2 lety

    Thank you, now i know how and why important to have a constant agitation for the first minute

  • @elizastephens
    @elizastephens Před rokem

    great vid. did you say that a wash could be 5 tank changes? not sitting in running water for 10 mins? sounds much better. Pleased to see your pendulum motion and the tip about pouring the chems straight in. really helpful as always :)

    • @DistinctionPhotoLLC
      @DistinctionPhotoLLC  Před rokem

      If you google the Ilford wash method it should bring up the process. Thanks!

    • @randallstewart1224
      @randallstewart1224 Před rokem

      That's what he said, and it may sound better, but 60 years of experience tells me that it won't do better. Washing B&W film means keeping fresh water in contact with the film emulsion surface long enough for the ions n the fixer to leach out f the emulsion. That means a minimum amount of time, period. Agitation, more than required to circulate the water, is pointless, so shaking it like a cocktail shaker may make you feel like you are accomplishing something, but you are not. I'm familiar with the "lford Method". I personally prefer Kodak's recommendation, which is running water for 20 minutes. Sounds like a lot of water down the drain, but we are talking about a flow only large enough to exchange the water in the tank once every minute. Set up properly, that works by itself and does not require the continuing attention of Ilford's.

  • @genernator
    @genernator Před 2 lety

    LOL! When I was in High School (1974) my TEACHER asked me to load his 35mm onto a reel for him since he always had problems! Nothing more than heartbreaking than seeing those large undeveloped blotches when you click on the lights. When possible I always shot many exposures of the same scene to avoid that occasional misfeed! Great memories.

    • @DistinctionPhotoLLC
      @DistinctionPhotoLLC  Před 2 lety

      That is heartbreaking indeed … equally as bad is seeing a whole roll of clear film 😔.

    • @genernator
      @genernator Před 2 lety

      @@DistinctionPhotoLLC I am a NYC street photographer. Always roamed the streets with my Nikkormat FTN and my 50. One day (70's) i had a remarkably magical moment and captured what i knew would be stunning images. I worked in the industry and had my own darkroom. Couldn't wait to get off of work to develop that roll! I always used D76. A coworker said I should try his Edwals FG7 for a nice grain structure. OK. Guess what! It was out of date and totally exhausted. I got exactly that...a blank roll of film! It haunts me to this day!! LOL!!

    • @DistinctionPhotoLLC
      @DistinctionPhotoLLC  Před 2 lety

      @@genernator what could have been! I get it I shot a few rolls out in Caramel Ava and was an amazing view of the rocks and ocean. Was so pumped about these shots. At the time I was using Xtol…. Well the batch I mixed was one of their problem batches. Unwound the reel to see clear and a faint… very faint images of what could have been.. still in my mind my best prints ever… so painful.
      Thanks for sharing! I take it you prob went back to d76?

    • @genernator
      @genernator Před 2 lety

      @@DistinctionPhotoLLC Yes. the only 2 developers i ever used was that and Microdol-x for fine grain. Tri-X was my film of choice. We used to tape 4 or 5 film cannisters to our thin leather camera straps which looked pretty cool. I bought my film in bulk and loaded my own. There was a place in lower Manhattan called the Henry Street Settlement where we would go every Tuesday and there was a huge darkroom with about 6 Omega B22 enlargers and all paper (8x10 polycontrast) and chemistry was free! Heaven on earth for us back then! Glory Days!

    • @DistinctionPhotoLLC
      @DistinctionPhotoLLC  Před 2 lety

      @@genernator that sounds so cool! We had a community darkroom here long ago. I was young and never used it. Would love to see that come back! I have always wanted to “roll my own” but never have…. Maybe with prices going up continually I will!!!

  • @SD_Alias
    @SD_Alias Před 3 lety +5

    So nice to see that younger people do darkroom work today again.
    I've been developing films since my youth around 1982 and at the beginning I also used Kindermann's tanks and stainless steel spirals. But I never really liked her. For beginners in particular, i recommend the Paterson spirals. Not so often film sticking together because of jumping over to the next string. May be i am just a clumsy person ;)
    The paterson tanks vent much faster, so that you can save yourself the hassle with the open lid in the darkroom. At short dev times under 5 min i always prewash with tap water to avoid streaks in the short developing time.
    As a final bath, I always only use distilled water without a foto flo and without squeeging. I just hang them to dry. Because there are no minerals in destilled water there can be no stain later. Do NOT reuse the destilled water from the final rinse.
    I never have any residue on the film.

    • @DistinctionPhotoLLC
      @DistinctionPhotoLLC  Před 3 lety +1

      Thanks for the info! It has been a long time since I used Patteson tanks. I will have to give them another go. I remember the ratcheting reels for 35mm. were pretty easy for beginners to learn!
      For really important film I do not squeegee at all now either. I will give it a shot with out Photoflo next time as I do still end up with slight residual stains sometimes... easy enough to clean.

  • @oudviola
    @oudviola Před 3 lety +1

    Thanks for this, very interesting. Swiping the washed film with fingers is a new trick to me, am not comfortable with squeegeeing. Also did not know about silver test strips. Amazon says they are not available though, will shop around.

    • @DistinctionPhotoLLC
      @DistinctionPhotoLLC  Před 3 lety

      Thank you! Often I just hang the film once rinsed in final rinse with photoflo. My 4x5 negs never get squeegeed at all and always dry spotless. The silver strips seem to go in and out of stock. Hope they get them soon as I am running low.

    • @oudviola
      @oudviola Před 3 lety +2

      @@DistinctionPhotoLLC Thanks again. I've been having some problems with some streaking lately, my bottle of Ilfotol (their equivalent to Kodak Photoflo) is a couple years' old since you use such a tiny amount per film, and apparently it can go bad. Also more problems with 35mm film than medium format, apparently the film base is different. I can get away with tap water here (Montreal, Quebec) for everything in medium format developing, but have needed distilled for 35mm - it adds a notable amount to the cost per roll. Re silver test strips, they are listed as available at SEOH Corp (Scientific Equipment of Houston), and somewhere else I didn't note. I've just emailed to ask if they actually have it in stock. A lot of things that probably come from China are back ordered due to the pandemic I guess.

    • @DistinctionPhotoLLC
      @DistinctionPhotoLLC  Před 3 lety

      @@oudviola just checked the link on Amazon and said 5 left. I need to order butwas logged out of my account and for the life of me can not remember my password 🤓
      I have filtered water here and dries nicely. Otherwise distilled is always good but you do have buy it... I have noticed if you use to much photoflo it can also cause marks.

    • @oudviola
      @oudviola Před 3 lety +1

      @@DistinctionPhotoLLC Hmm, I checked amazon earlier today and it said not available indefinitely. Anyway, hopefully these other suppliers have it. I figured out that using distilled water for making up fresh developer plus the final wash cost as much per roll as the stock chemicals combined (per roll)! I need dH2O for my CPAP machine (anti-sleep apnea) so I'm already spending on it. But agree it's better in principle. p.s. Just watched your split grade filter printing episode, also very nice although there are a couple other decent discussions (Ilford has one). But it's important to see different peoples' processes, your take is yours and great to see. Have to followup now with the dodging/burning using an ND filter, hadn't thought of that but a great way to slow things down I can see. Thanks again! p.p.s. Are all CZcams photography channels run by guys name Matt(hew)!? (you, Matt Day, Matthew Lethbridge, Mat Marash...)

  • @IncendiaHL
    @IncendiaHL Před 2 měsíci

    That tape on the 120 film can be so dangerous!
    I recently loaded a film onto the reel in a darkroom (my bathroom), and I suddenly thought to myself, that it's probably better for the development to remove the tape from the film. So I started peeling it off.
    While peeling, I thought I saw a flash of light, but I shrugged it off. Thought it might be an illusion from the lack of visual stimulus. Then I kept peeling and saw it again! It then dawned on me. TAPE EXHIBITS TRIBOLUMINESCENCE (glows in the dark) when you peel it off. I even got an exposed mark on the negatives from that tape flash.
    Lesson learned. Don't try to be smart. Just bend the tape over the film just like this video shows.

    • @DistinctionPhotoLLC
      @DistinctionPhotoLLC  Před 2 měsíci +1

      Man... thank you for this. Though I always leave the tape on the last part of the film (think it was a Fred Picker suggestion) and never had a problem with it... I have experienced the same phenomenon with removing the tape from the backing, I always thought I was imagining it. Guess not. Never noticed an actual exposure from it.
      Now I know I was not losing my mind though :) H
      Hope the negs were still ok! Wonder if going slowly will prevent this in the future?

    • @IncendiaHL
      @IncendiaHL Před 2 měsíci

      @@DistinctionPhotoLLC
      Haha cool! Yeah I'm guessing the flash is proportional to the force being applied. The tape sticks very well on the film, so I had to pull pretty hard just to get some of it off. It's much easier to get off the backing paper, so you probably need to yank it fast to make it flash up. I'll definitely be more gentle with it from now on.
      The exposure was coin sized but "luckily" the pictures were all rubbish anyways 😅

  • @GavinLyonsCreates
    @GavinLyonsCreates Před 2 lety

    Totally agree on printing negatives, it is much more fun than scanning them. What I've learned by myself is using different developers for what you want to achieve in terms of tone and grain. Also for what is suitable for the speed of the film. I semi-stand develop with Rodinal or Spur N Acurol. For me I like to temperature control my developer. I find this gives me great the results every time.
    Using inexpensive film such as Agfa APX 100 or FP4 I can get the contrast and tonality I'm after. What I'm saying is, if folks spend more time developing their film techniques I guess they wouldn't need so much to be film hopping.

    • @DistinctionPhotoLLC
      @DistinctionPhotoLLC  Před 2 lety +2

      Such a great point.... I want to make a video on the importance of learning one film / developer Combo well... so many people seem to shoot “everything” ... master of none type stuff. There is only so much you can shoot and all the materials are pretty amazing once they are learned and dialed in to suit your needs! Cheers!

    • @GavinLyonsCreates
      @GavinLyonsCreates Před 2 lety

      @@DistinctionPhotoLLC I'm curious to know which combination you'd choose.

    • @DistinctionPhotoLLC
      @DistinctionPhotoLLC  Před 2 lety +1

      Been HP5 and HC110 through the Hasselblad for a while now... Now 4x5 I have a few contenders I am trying to nail down!

    • @John-mf1sz
      @John-mf1sz Před 11 měsíci

      @@DistinctionPhotoLLCAgreed. I discovered great results with FP4 a decode or so ago and stuck with it about 90% of the time ever since.
      The only time I’m not shooting FP4 is if I want to shoot slides.

  • @igaluitchannel6644
    @igaluitchannel6644 Před 3 lety +1

    I've never been able to use those metal reels, lol.

    • @DistinctionPhotoLLC
      @DistinctionPhotoLLC  Před 3 lety +1

      I’ve had bent ones in the past that were impossible. The film would just buckle. but once I got new ones I have never looked back. Really love them for 120. But in the end it is just a light tight tank and what works works 👍

    • @igaluitchannel6644
      @igaluitchannel6644 Před 3 lety +1

      @@DistinctionPhotoLLC The trouble was getting the film to fit smoothly in the grooves, so I switched to Paterson tanks, even though they're more cumbersome.

  • @philipu150
    @philipu150 Před rokem

    Mathew, just catching up with some of your videos. I noticed in a recent meter linearity test done on 120 that my development did not seem entirely even. Troubling, after the decades I've been working -- carefully -- in B&W. Anyway, I may give your lower developer volume a try, and possibly increase initial agitation time. I only hesitate because I have spent far more hours than I wish to think about over the past 5 years since returning to the darkroom after a 13-year hiatus, testing, making stupid mistakes, tracking down gremlins, etc., etc., in 3 formats, new developer, N + and -, and so on. (Done in sparse free time, ergo stretched out, making it more difficult.) Longer initial agitation is likely to require my altering development time -- again, which makes me cringe, even though I can recompute variations on a percentage basis, so I'll start with volume and see what happens. Thanks for the suggestion.

    • @DistinctionPhotoLLC
      @DistinctionPhotoLLC  Před rokem

      My guess would be the volume would be a bigger issue. I had terrible unevenness on some rolls and it dawned on me that I was filling the tank completely, leaving no space for the exhausted developer to displace efficiently.
      That has solved the problem I was having.
      I have always done 1 minute of initial agitation even on those uneven rolls so I can not say for sure. But do sanity’s sake first try the lower volume.
      Then if needed I would try more agitation but if it’s not broke… you know. Also I would think the density would be slightly greater that retesting everything would not be necessary unless getting unexpected results.

    • @philipu150
      @philipu150 Před rokem

      @@DistinctionPhotoLLC Well, the volume didn't cure it; I'm still getting extra edge density and some faint unevenness in the rest. I'm going to try longer initial agitation and regular direction reversal. With 4x5 in the Stearmann 445, I had to use Tim's exact agitation method to get evenness. It's a quick inversion series, with a reversal included. It reminded me of Tech PA (did you ever try that when it was around?), which was prickly stuff, requiring the same "quick flip" inversion with restrained twisting. Stay tuned for the next thrilling episode of As the Tank Turns.

    • @philipu150
      @philipu150 Před rokem

      @@DistinctionPhotoLLC Longer initial agitation makes a noticeable difference. I committed the cardinal sin of changing two variables at once -- length and manner of agitation, so the direction reversal may also be helping. In any case, the difference between agitating for the first 30 sec and first minute appears ti be very small, if not questionable in my case, concerning evenness between the two, so, in order to avoid the complication of changing all my times, which the 1 minute would requires, and varying procedures by format, I am going to run with 30 and the direction-reversal for both 35 and 120.
      Again, I am grateful for this demo. I'm very pleased with the improvement. Best wishes to you (and your special guest star).

  • @peterfarr9591
    @peterfarr9591 Před 2 lety

    How do you adjust your total dev time for the full minute of initial agitation, considering film recipes from manufacturers don't account for this much initial agitation?

    • @DistinctionPhotoLLC
      @DistinctionPhotoLLC  Před 2 lety +1

      I have always done my own film testing for dev times / temps so they print good for my darkroom setup.
      You will have more contrast from the initial agitation being more. You could compensate and reduce the time slightly to compensate though you might like the bump in contrast.
      If the film was a supper sunny high contrast scene I would reduce dev a bit maybe 15% or so. Only real way to know is to give it a shot. And take notes ( when shooting and developing)

  • @Guscastillonj
    @Guscastillonj Před 3 lety +1

    Hadn’t seen the drops of photo flo in the developer before. What’s the benefit of it? Is it meant to protect from foam and bubbles during development?

    • @DistinctionPhotoLLC
      @DistinctionPhotoLLC  Před 3 lety +5

      Will help reduce the surface tension of the development solution and should help achieve even development. Will help with foam to but carefull not to use too much or it can cause even worse problems with foaming. Other people swear by Edwal LFN as it is not supposed to build up on the tanks over time. I have never noticed this with Photoflo but wash the tanks well after using. (or I should say my daughter does :)

  • @samsmith2506
    @samsmith2506 Před 3 lety

    Nah i can't pour the chems in the containers in the dark. I just start the timer when i get it all in, (I subtract about 30sec from the set total time) turn it off when it's time to pour it out.
    Does your tank leak onto your hands when you invert it?

    • @DistinctionPhotoLLC
      @DistinctionPhotoLLC  Před 3 lety +1

      Right on, if it works for you then go with it! Yeah one of my lids leaks a little but nothing major. just annoying.

  • @mathewmccarthy9848
    @mathewmccarthy9848 Před 2 lety

    I'm revisiting this video. How do you expose your film to get the consistency you're looking for? And do you then compensate that during development? Example: Overexpose for shadow/Underdevelop for highlights?

    • @DistinctionPhotoLLC
      @DistinctionPhotoLLC  Před 2 lety +1

      If you want to get consistent results. Be consistent 👍
      Expose for the shadows and develop for the highlights is the way to go for darkroom printing for sure. Expose your film consistently for the same shadow tones. And develop consistent for the contrast of the scene ( ie dev for the highlights)
      You want to get the shadow detail, midtones and highlights all on the steepest part of the tone curve where their is the most contrast and separation.
      For Medium format with HP5 I usually use 1 of 3 exposure and dev methods.
      Normal sunny day and subject shoot at iso 300 and develop normally
      Really overcast. Low contrast I will shoot between 400-800 and give 50% more development (ie from 10 min up to 15 min)
      If it is a super high contrast scene I will expose at iso 160 and use a compensation development to control the highlights.
      I find these 3 approaches gets me consistent results on roll film where I can make up for any variances on a roll in the darkroom.
      Large Format I tend to try and be more specific to each sheet. A bit more zone system.
      Scanning is a bit different beast but have found my negatives to scan well. I am first trying to have them print well in the darkroom 👍
      Hope that helps!

    • @mathewmccarthy9848
      @mathewmccarthy9848 Před 2 lety

      @@DistinctionPhotoLLC Thank you for taking the time to write/send this, Matthew! I certainly want to get consistent with my film work. This will help out a lot. I'm just now going through Way Beyond Monochrome 2nd Ed and The Darkroom Cookbook. Side note: Love of your Las Vegas night work; I live in Vegas so when I saw that video it was a pleasant surprise. Happy holidays!

    • @DistinctionPhotoLLC
      @DistinctionPhotoLLC  Před 2 lety

      @@mathewmccarthy9848 Awesome to hear... Love Vegas!
      I would really try to get a method that works for you. Both those books are amazing.
      Way beyond Monochrome is great but I try not to get to caught up in the super analytical stuff.
      I have used tons of things from both of those books but do not do everything the same as either of those texts...
      I guess, just do not get to caught up in doing things "the right way" there are many ways to accomplish prints you are happy with.
      It really comes down to shooting a lot and finding what works for you!

  • @matneu27
    @matneu27 Před 2 lety

    Intresting insights how other guys develop film. 👍 Dip the role in the pre filled developer is an argument for improving the task.
    Allow me questions :
    1.
    Some people reported that the "shock" of the stop bath will harm the emulsion and produce pits. Isn't it better to stop with water rinse like recommended in serval literature?
    2. Is there an advantage of steel rolls and tanks compared to the plastic patterson or jobo?

    • @DistinctionPhotoLLC
      @DistinctionPhotoLLC  Před 2 lety +1

      I have used water as a stop bath. Especially when using developers like Pyrocat HD where it is necessary.
      For normal developers I was having an issue and believe it was using water without enough exchanges as a stop bath. Since going back to mostly Ilford I use their recommendations as much as possible ( but definitely deviate a bit)
      Using a stop bath relieved the problem I was having so have been using it ever since.
      Nothing wrong with using water as a stop if you are getting good results 👍
      I prefer the steel tanks. I find them easier to load myself. They will adhere to a water bath much quicker other that that I just prefer them probably because I have just used them for so long. I have heard arguments for both. Not sure it makes that huge of a difference.

    • @matneu27
      @matneu27 Před 2 lety

      @@DistinctionPhotoLLC thank you for sharing your experience 👍

  • @SilntObsvr
    @SilntObsvr Před 2 lety

    Agitation is an important control for your process. I've processed film (by hand, in a small tank) with anything from continuous, very vigorous agitation (special case, I was pushing Tri-X to EI 5000-6400) to as little as two inversions ever 3 minutes, even going as far as semi-stand, half an hour or more with a single inversion cycle halfway through. My experience is that increased agitation increases contrast -- but i agree, that it's also possible to produce density variation if your tank/reel costruction, agitation style, and fill level don't match up. Worse, on 35 mm film, flow marks from excessive agitation with minimal developer can resemble bromide drag from too little agitation.
    Best thing I can suggest to those who are new to film development: shoot and process test rolls with "normal" contrast range to work out your process before committing "important" images. It's no big deal if a test shot of your barbecue grill and back yard gets bromide drag, tide lines (from too-slow filling), etc. You'd be *extremely* annoyed if that happened with your grandmother's funeral shots...

    • @DistinctionPhotoLLC
      @DistinctionPhotoLLC  Před 2 lety

      Can not agree more. My experience 100%. I have had weird uneven development with 35mm from agitating to "rough" that looked like drag. Also uneven skies, etc. from filling the tank all the way. This was with medium format.
      Recently I have tried moving my medium format film ( black and white to rotary - Jobo). and for the life of me could not get even development. (big "ruts") Hands down the best method for 120 film fore me is small tank with proper technique. It gives far superior and more even development.
      The weird thing is it looks like for C-41 process medium format (mostly Porta) the Jobo does a good (or good enough job) for developing color film... No extensive testing but have not noticed an issue and am curious as to why?
      Have Expert Tank for 4x5 and seems good and 35mm on the Jobo with the same tanks / reels seem fine...
      I guess the point is like you say. Everyone should do their own testing before shooting an "important" event or other once in a lifetime opportunity.
      Thanks!

    • @SilntObsvr
      @SilntObsvr Před 2 lety

      @@DistinctionPhotoLLC If you read Kodak's instructions for C-41, they actually recommend continuous agitation with intermittent agitation (what we usually do with stainless or Paterson/Jobo type tanks) as a second choice; they also recommend one-shot use of the Flexicolor chemistry in small tanks with inversion. I do my C-41 in a Paterson and agitate with the twizzle stick rather than inversion -- in order to limit developer oxidation in support of replenishment.
      For B&W, there are dozens of ways and amounts of agitation that can produce excellent results with different film and developer combinations.

    • @DistinctionPhotoLLC
      @DistinctionPhotoLLC  Před 2 lety

      @@SilntObsvr I have had good results with Kodak and C41 (Cinestill Kit) on the Jobo all continuous... But do not have anything to compare it to. Thanks!

  • @randallstewart1224
    @randallstewart1224 Před rokem

    I've be developing my B&W film for more than 60 years. I put this video in the top 2% of all YT videos if you want to learn how to do this properly. Only two comments: (1) I've never seen anyone use a two fixer bath fixer sequnce, as one, properly agitated for enough time, is totally adequate. Time your fixing period(s) per the manufacture's recommendation. His 2 minutes in used fixer, then one minute in fresh fixer, seems too short (collectively) for most fixers. (2) He is unclear as to the extent of his washing process. The Ilford Method he mentions requires more than the five exchanges he indicates (see their website for details), and Kodak's recommendation is 20 minutes in slowly running water.

  • @markhaney2884
    @markhaney2884 Před 2 lety

    Hello I need help!!!! Wanted to revive my love for black and white film and printing in my darkroom. Just called Adorama to order , film, chemicals and paper. They had almost nothing, especially chemicals. Any one know where supplies are available?? Live in Ohio, local Camera stores are worthless.

    • @DistinctionPhotoLLC
      @DistinctionPhotoLLC  Před 2 lety +1

      I typically buy things through Adorama as they usually have stuff. Just checked and HC110 is on back order. Have to place a paper order soon…….
      So I will also use B&H (but if stuff is back ordered at Adorama a lot of times same situation at B&H) B&H will not ship chemicals which stinks.
      Another place I use a lot is Freestyle Photo in California. Great place but I typically pay more for shipping from them and prices can be better on some things and worse on others. I order a lot from them and their Arista rebranded stuff is quite nice and less pricey.
      I am lucky to have a local place about 45 min that sticks film & chemicals so am trying to buy more from them.
      I buy bulk chemicals from Photographers formulary if you wanted to go that route.
      Hope that helps and maybe others have some more suggestions. Good luck!

  • @john_murch
    @john_murch Před 2 lety

    Help! I've just started developing and I'm having a major problem. I'm developing HP5 in D76. @1:1. Think I'm doing every step mostly correct but my negatives are almost entirely covered in a black blob! The only mistake I think I may be making is my fixer is expired and I over-compensated by fixing for 10 minutes rather than 2-5 minutes. Do you know what could be the reason for the dark black splotchiness on most of the negative frames? The first four negatives are fine and then black blob. I've ruined three films now. TIA !!

    • @DistinctionPhotoLLC
      @DistinctionPhotoLLC  Před 2 lety

      Hey John. Sorry to hear… that can be frustrating for sure. HP5 and D76 is a nice combo.
      Would like to see what this looks like. Any way you can send me a pic or scan?
      When you say black blob it sounds like you might have a leak or something going on. Sounds like exposure on the film but would want to see this.
      It would not think it would be the fix as long as it is fresh. However I would not over fix either.
      My guess would be in the exposure or dev side of things. Are all chemicals fresh?
      I would also go over to Phototrio.com (formerly APUG) and post a scan / image their. So many amazing film photographers that are always willing to help.
      Feel free to send me pics/scans to my email or my @distphotofilm Insta acount and I will gladly take a look.

    • @DistinctionPhotoLLC
      @DistinctionPhotoLLC  Před 2 lety

      Also when you say expired fixer. Is it exhausted or just old? If it is not fixing properly that could also be the issue but again would have to see the film.

    • @john_murch
      @john_murch Před 2 lety +1

      @@DistinctionPhotoLLC That's very kind of you, thank you! I will send some pics of the negative and my dev details. Really want to get this thing sorted out. Cheers!

  • @8andre3
    @8andre3 Před 3 lety +1

    Why do you add the photo flo to the developer, instead of washing the film with photo flo at the end like usual?

    • @DistinctionPhotoLLC
      @DistinctionPhotoLLC  Před 3 lety +2

      I do use the photoflo at the end as a rinse aid.
      Adding it to the developer helps break the surface tension and can help with more even development. I actually started doing it as a remedy for small pinholes I was getting in a certain emulsion and have just done it ever since. Definitely not required and you have to be careful not to use to much. It did solve my original issue and have just kept using it even though I really do not shoot that film anymore. 👍

    • @8andre3
      @8andre3 Před 3 lety

      @@DistinctionPhotoLLC thank you, I've never seen anyone doing it so it got me curious. I'll try it next time I develop it. You just use a couple of drops?

    • @DistinctionPhotoLLC
      @DistinctionPhotoLLC  Před 3 lety +1

      @@8andre3 yes 1-2 drops per liter.

  • @randallstewart175
    @randallstewart175 Před rokem

    I have watched a lot of YT videos proposing to instruct on how to process film. The majority of them are relative newbees just repeating what they saw in an earlier YT video. Errors are many and the relatively terrible Paterson System 4 tank with the wide mouth top and pop-off surprise plastic lid is standard. This fellow is nearly as anal as me about processing technique. A double bath fixer for film? I am impressed. (No, I do not.) I award 9 or of 10 points here. Where did that last point go? Washing technique. He's not real clear on the matter here, but it seems he is using the "Ilford Method", and if so, it is not archival as he presents. It is minimal/adequate for soon use film without intent for long term storage. For example, Kodak recommends 20 minutes in running water for archival washing. I use a "hypo eliminator" which chemically alters the active ingredients in fixer to reduce wash times by about 75% followed by a 10 minute wash in a film washing device. (That film washer uses enough water in one cycle to send a water conservationist into a coma, but it will do 3 120 or 6 35mm reels at a time).

    • @DistinctionPhotoLLC
      @DistinctionPhotoLLC  Před rokem +1

      Appreciate the feedback! I usually just do a tea minute wash with roll film. I mentioned the Ilford method because it may work better for some without a darkroom etc... I try to minimize the time in the fixer therefore needing less wash time and the film does not absorb the fixer like fiber based paper does. I use a two fix regimen with film mostly to ensure fresh fix for every film (second bath) and an easy way to monitor the silver levels of the first bath. Prob overkill but has worked well for me. Cheers!

  • @nickdattner8680
    @nickdattner8680 Před 8 měsíci

    I wash my hands in dishwashing liquid and they feel like talcum powder.

    • @DistinctionPhotoLLC
      @DistinctionPhotoLLC  Před 8 měsíci

      I will have to try the dishwashing liquid… I often wash and dry my hands good just before, especially if I have just mixed chemicals without gloves so will give this a try!

  • @ionluv
    @ionluv Před rokem

    As someone who has never developed this video sure makes it seem very elaborate and difficult. Not encouraging at all 😂

    • @DistinctionPhotoLLC
      @DistinctionPhotoLLC  Před rokem +2

      Sorry man. I ensure you it’s easy. But a lot of info out there encourages bad habits best avoided from the get go.

    • @ionluv
      @ionluv Před rokem

      @@DistinctionPhotoLLC would developing one roll at a time in a smaller tank give the same good results if you pour through the lid instead of going dark for a quick pour?

  • @ronchecora5266
    @ronchecora5266 Před 9 měsíci +1

    PRESOAK in water for 3 minutes. All your processing flaws will go away.

    • @DistinctionPhotoLLC
      @DistinctionPhotoLLC  Před 9 měsíci +1

      Not been my experience. Also it has been advised that if you do personal use a minimum of 5 min

    • @ronchecora5266
      @ronchecora5266 Před 9 měsíci

      @@DistinctionPhotoLLC three works for me. Proof is in the pudding. Would you like to take a look at my negs...no problem mate.