Childs play, eh!
I have used dragons for years, or perhaps they used me...
Interesting!
Printable View
One of my first attempts with xray film:
Fuji Green Xray
Goerz Artar 19"
Ilford Warmtone
Nice. Why are there two? Do they differ by exposure?
Thanks! I couldn't figure out how to get rid of the image after attaching it by mistake again. I was hoping it would tell me how large the image could be when I uploaded too, but I didn't see that. I'll have to hunt around and find that before posting another image. This film really scratches easy, but I think I have the processing down now. I used Rodinal 1:200 but seems like 1:100 gives better contrast. I'm doing dbi and because the back side is emulsion I'm not seeing the highlights like I do with regular film, but 9-12 minutes seems in the ballpark. Anyone have any pointers on what to look for? Seems like you can only look at the highlights on the exposed emulsion side by tilting the film slightly in the light. No inspection by transmission...
thanks, Will
8m , Rodinal 1:150, rotary
8x10 Kodak CSG
https://farm9.staticflickr.com/8679/...81b9525f_b.jpgShort break by Sergei Rodionov, on Flickr
Attachment 125768
Ektascan @80 ISO | HC-110 H Rotary
My first 8x10 shot and first X-ray shot! Question for X-ray shooters: Why is this showing up almost solarized? Is it the film or a scanning issue?
edit: It could be that I overdeveloped and it looks like this as a result of bringing everything down keep highlights from blowing out. I'm not sure, I hate scanning. I need to contact print it.
Logan, I never seen solarizing effect except for loading film backwards when it's one sided :)
Sergei, I'm pretty sure both sheets were loaded with the emulsion facing the right way. Maybe "solarizing effect" was a bad way for me to describe it, but I think if you look at my image and your image above it, you can see that the tones are WAY different.