--- Steve from Missouri ---
TMX is very sensitive to light (good) and consequently, mechanical damage (not so good). I went round and round with Kodak about this when TMX first came out. Kodak analyzed my film and negs. I'm pretty careful with film handling, but Kodak basically said I was 'heavy handed' with the film. I guess I was. Can't challenge the great yellow father. TMX you can't bend, flex, touch, or smile at without some exposure. I abandoned using the film long ago for this reason. But it is this high sensitivity that gives it the long toe and negligible reciprocity failure.
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How are you storing the film after you shoot it? How do you ship it? I was storing my exposed film in the film box, but they moved around on each other and caused scratches. They all appeared clear on the D100 and Tmax100. I stopped doing that. The black looks line dirty chemicals or contaminated developer. Given their randomness in shape and size and the fact they are dense I lean towards dirty and or contaminated chemicals.
I've been having this issue lately with my film. Assuming the problem lies with scratching the negative before development, how would you suggest handling them to minimize this issue? I tend to reload using a film changing bag since I don't have a darkroom of my own... might it be a good idea to invest in one of those film changing tents so that the film doesn't come in contact with the bag while loading?
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