Carrying on from the previous thread on Fomapan200 and reciprocity....
Does anyone have any info on Development Time adjustment....
Cheers folks
Carrying on from the previous thread on Fomapan200 and reciprocity....
Does anyone have any info on Development Time adjustment....
Cheers folks
If I understand you correctly, and you're looking for development time adjustment for reciprocity curves, I think that the corrections you make while exposing should allow you to develop normally, unless you want to heighten or lower contrast of the negative.
--Gary
By the way, ask people for "ideas," not "clues." Over here in the New World, and perhaps in parts of the UK, saying "any clues," has "Get a clue!" connotations.
On an somewhat related, unrelated matter, does "West of Scotland" mean Ireland? Ireland is, of course, west of Scotland. Or, does it mean the west of Scotland, i.e. western Scotland? It's the little differences in language that trip us up sometimes. I was an English major in college. Could you tell? Anyway, I've always wanted to visit Scotland and Ireland. My ancestors were kicked out of both places a few centuries ago.
Cheers!
--Gary L. Quay
No sarcasm was implied in "Any clues folks". But thanks for pointing out the terminological implications of the statement! Here on the Western coast of Scotland it would probably be considered a fairly normal saying! As I'm sure you understand, the British bourgeoisie bear a very great responsibility for brutalizing and displacing many millions of Scots and Irish people.
Gary I'm just about to do some film speed and development tests with Fomapan200 with a true speed I believe of around (80iso) so fully expect to regularly experience reciprocity failure. With my original question I was hoping to find out some ball park figures of the development time adjustments required to give normal contrast to a given negative during long exposures. As I understand, during long exposures contrast increases can be significant and depending on the scene will require a contraction of contrast.
I have recently discovered a Reciprocity table with dev time adjustments compiled by Ralph Lambrecht that was based on suggestions by John Sexton and Howard Bond and then combined with his own test results. The tests were done with TMax-100/400 and also with conventional film. So my current thinking is to treat the Foma200 as conventional film and see what happens unless anyone has any direct experience with this film themselves.........?
ps Gary bet you can tell that I never majored in English. Thanks to spell chequer I can appear half literate .........
I use PMK Pyro for night scenes due to its compensation effects. You can get it from Photographers Formulary, if they'll ship it across the Atlantic. You can develop normally with it, but you really have to use graded papers when you print.
--Gary
Last edited by Gary L. Quay; 20-Nov-2007 at 15:08. Reason: grammar
You can develop normally with it, but you really have to use graded papers when you print.
?????????????????
steve simmons
Link to the Foma site:
http://www.foma.cz/Upload/foma/prilohy/F_pan_200_en.pdf
For 1 second increase exposure by 1.5 stops from the metered reading; 10 seconds, increase by 3 stops; 100 seconds, increase by 4 stops.
Cheers.
Foma 200 works very well with PMK Pyro and is excellent with MC papers.
As Steve has indicated once before in a post I had on Foma 200 [and this is data I have arrived at with a blue channel densitometer] A zone 8 reading should be in the range of 1.45 - 1.6 to give you the snap you are after. This will depend on your enlarger light source.
______
Oh -- and on English Gary -- despite the fact that the US has a population of over 200 million far more than that figure speak and understand English throughout the rest of the world.
"Any clues" is a common expression - in Australia we would probably call it slang - it conveys very well the friendly idea of a person asking for ideas or help, so please do not correct English useage based on your minority American viewpoint. If you are uncertain of a terminology ask and some other list user with a world view of the English language should be able to offer a translation if you find yourself "challenged".
When in reciprocity failure situations, generally you adjust development downward by 10% for each stop of exposure correction. So, if you give 1 1/2 stops additional exposure, you would cut development time by 15%. When you are dealing with extreme reciprocity issues, I would strongly advocate stand/semi-stand/extreme minimal agitation development regimes, where the combination of extended development time and highly dilute developer means you can safely cut development time by up to 40% and still have full shadow and midtone development. Do NOT base your reciprocity adjustments for Fomapan 200 on Tmax behavior, especially not on Tmax 400, which has the absolute least reciprocity failure of any film currently in production, and requires the least correction in development. Fomapan, while a beautiful film, has terrible reciprocity, so comparing it to Tmax is like comparing apples to reptiles.
Just as an FYI, I shoot a LOT of the Fomapan 200, and I rate it at 100. It makes a great film for alt-process printing, if you're so inclined.
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