Sirius Glass
Subscriber
A 100ºF presoak? That sounds like you're just begging for reticulation to me! Really 100ºF?
PE is referring to the C-41 processing for color print film.
Steve
A 100ºF presoak? That sounds like you're just begging for reticulation to me! Really 100ºF?
I always use 1 soak of 1 minute at whatever temperature the development is going to be. (e.g. A 68ºF soak for a 68ºF developer.)
The rationale I was taught was that it brought everything to the same temperature as the developer so that the thermal mass of the film, reels and tank would not affect the temperature of the liquid poured in.
I was also told it removes the antihalation dye if there is one.
Now, I also know that it prevents air bubbles from sticking to the film as well.
Sounds like there are more chips on the "presoak" side of the scale than there are on the "don't presoak" side, to me!
A 100ºF presoak? That sounds like you're just begging for reticulation to me! Really 100ºF?
Shot these two images last Saturday & developed on Sunday. Just scanned and made digital contact/previews last night so I can get ready to print them this week. (See attached.)
I noticed the same artifact in both images. I'm just wondering if anybody has an idea what the cause was.
Both images are on the same roll of film. Probably 6 or 8 exposures apart.
Both images were shot within a half hour of each other. The locations were approximately a mile apart. They were both taken facing in the same general direction. Almost due west.
The time of day was about 1:00 in the afternoon. The sun was coming from my left front quarter. Basically at the top, left of the frame in both shots.
I think the spots are from lens flare but I've never seen lens flare look quite like this. Usually, lens flare looks lighter than the rest of the image and there is more halo around the image. Could it be that the lens flare was so bright it caused the film to reverse? I've never seen lens flares that are perfectly round, either. They are usually a little bit oblong when I've seen them in the past.
Film: Ilford Pan F+ (ASA 50 - shot at ASA 40)
Processed: XTOL (Full Strength) 6 min. 30 sec.
Camera: 35mm. Pentax ME Super 50mm /1.7. (Standard lens for that camera.)
Scanned from film: Canon 8800F flatbed 2400 dpi then downscaled to present via Photoshop.
The spots are visible on the negatives with a loupe.
Is this lens flare or is it something else?
What do you think?
T.I.A!![]()
Be sure to tell that to the folks at Ilford who determined that it was air bubbles.:rolleyes:Air bubbles wouldn't sit in the place shown on your images. It looks like fixer or acid got "flicked" on the film right before developer.
I haven't had a single roll of Pan F+ without this. Yes, they're air bubbles, no need for microscope. As a result, I dropped Pan F+ altogether, despite great tonality. Killed some of my best frames. I compliment Ilford for their great customer service, no irony here, but until they publish an unequivocal confirmation that they have fixed this "feature" of Pan F+ once and for all they're not getting this (lifelong, vocal) supporter back on the Pan.
Respectfully ripping open another brick of HP5+,
Vilk![]()
How do you expect a company to fix an issue that's down to your techniques rather than their product?
Does nine count?
Why even think of blaming the product when it is a technique caused problem?
I hate to say this in the face of Ilford's great record for high quality, but this looks like a DEC (Double Ended Comet) defect, caused by a bubble in a slide or curtain coater operation. I have seen nothing else like it but that or an extreme case of bromide drag on each side of an air bubble. But this is on the upper edge of that air bubble defect for size and density.
PE
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