SINCE POSTING: There appears to be an anomaly here, either from errors in recording notes or running the tests. It is embarrassing, but I will need to run further tests to check the results indicated below. My sincere apologies. -- Philip
UPDATE 4/15
I'll pick up thread below, with further results and discussion.
I thought I would share a few notes from recent continuation of tests with David Kachel's SLIMT contrast-wise bleaching (http://www.davidkachel.com/assets/cont_pt3.htm) and related measures.
I’ve been using Kachel’s method of film pre-bleaching as a means of compensating development for some years. Since LF portraits by natural light, often indoors, frequently require long-ish exposures, I have been interested in seeing if I could get adequate low-value detail, shooting HP5 at 400 instead of my customary 200, in cases where large areas with such low-value detail are not crucial. (I presently use only one developer, D-23, for simplicity; hence, I have not pursued something like Microphen, which could offer a speed-gain.)
If this causes you to shake your head at one more poor fool searching after alchemic magic, I will only say, with all humility, I have been processing and printing for more than 50 years, and have done enough testing to know better.
While I have by no means exhausted the potential of SLIMT in my testing, its support of low values in compensating development for extra-long subject-luminance ranges led me recently to see if this benefit could be obtained with lower concentrations of SLIMT, so as to lessen the high-value compensating effects. My weekend’s tests used just 8 ml of SLIMT working solution in 16 oz. of water for 3 minutes, with normal agitation, prior to normal development.
I performed this test first in 35mm, shooting a controlled subject at EI 400 and then with 1 and 2 stops under- and over-exposure, for a series of 5 frames, which I repeated. Separating the two sequences onto two reels, the first got the SLIMT treatment and then was added to the other reel, and the two were then developed together normally in the same tank.
In 4x5, with another set-up and carefully defined zone values, I exposed 5 frames, ½ or ¼ second, aperture constant:
One at EI 200
Two at EI 400
One at EI 400 with a pre-exposure on Zone I using an ExpoDisc.
The 200, one of the regular 400s, and the last one received Normal development for their respective EIs, based on previous tests. The remaining 400 got SLIMT pre-bleaching as above (4ml, 3 minutes).
Results:
35mm: As shown in the attached (approx. 11x enlargement) prints, printed straight and identically, the SLIMT neg shows a marked improvement in what was about Zone II in the scene, as well as a roughly one-stop value decrease on Zone VIII. It also shows what I have noticed consistently before, which is an increased appearance of grain, for which I have no explanation (seen most clearly in the clay pot rim, if that comes across here).
I have previously compared, at EI 400, N development and N+1 with SLIMT on a outdoor scene of full range, the N+1 to restore high-value density at Zone VIII. The boost to values from II through IV by SLIMT is marked; for small format, the grain might be an issue, depending on degree of enlargement.
4x5: The EI 200, of course, shows the benefit of increased shadow detail in Zone II as well as III. However, the straight 400 negative does have the detail available; it would just be a little work to keep it when printing -- again, this for a subject in which such area(s) was confined and manageable -- and the negative tonality overall would tend to be slightly different. That was encouraging. The SLIMT neg shows about the low-value density of the 200 neg. Grain is not an issue in this format at the sizes I print (up to 11x14 with some cropping); the SLIMT treatment, however, does affect the total range differently from exposure changes, so there is a trade-off to be considered with certain subjects. For a subject with important luminances going into Zones IX or X , this slight compensating effect, combined with the low-value support, could be just the thing to allow the EI 400, allowing, for instance, a 2-second rather than 4-second (requiring 5 seconds when compensated) exposure.
The ExpoDisc neg shows only slight improvement and the extra hint of overall fog it necessarily entails. I won’t be pursuing this avenue further. (Others have shown why Adams's use in Poloroid prints differs from standard negative photography.) SLIMT is a better tool for me.
Trade-off is the key word here. We all want ideal negatives to make ideal prints. In my work, however, this more gentle use of SLIMT than I had considered previously, adds one more tool to the box.
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