There is zero hope that it will look or scan better when reverse processed.
Ah, but it'll look interesting for sure!
There is zero hope that it will look or scan better when reverse processed.
Ah, but it'll look interesting for sure!
You may well be right, but there's only one way to find out for sureIf I manage to find another roll of Phoenix, I'm gonna give it a try. For science, of course.
My understanding was lower time/temperature of first developer = lower density?
So i have developed a second roll, but with first developer 1:31 for 13 Minutes but 22°C.
It came out much darker, pictures are barely visible, so i am very much confused now...
My understanding was lower time/temperature of first developer = lower density? But it seems not to be so easy - as always ;-)
Some advises would be highly apreciated!
The color developer after the reverse is finishing treatment - only what is left of the first phase is developed there - even twice as long time with the color developer, will not cause a change in density.
I'd have to disagree. I did notice a slight change of density (higher Dmax) with doubling the time of colour developer (10 vs 5min in ECN-2).
still a bit dark,
using cyan dye to offset the orange base is like including a ND filter in the film.
....And hope its stays with newer versions....
I tried something similar with Vision3 500T several years ago. Being a tungsten balanced film means you don't need to use any additional cyan filtering to counteract the orange mask when using it in daylight. I exposed it at ISO 100 and used an ECP-2 color developer which has curve characteristics that further act to 'mask the mask', as it were.
I too found that the results don't scan well but do look quite good when viewed in person with daylight illumination.
View attachment 364312
Very interesting. Thank you for sharing your results.
Gregory Davis made an excellent video on RA 4 reversal filters:
As always, he used a systematic approach to figuring out the optimal combination of filters.
While film reversal is different from RA4 paper you can certainly adopt his methodology.
From very little I know about reversal processing, the first developer is the most critical step. It controls the contrast and the color shift. I am not sure if HC-110 is the optimal choice here. You might experiment with other developers. The formulas for several processes like E-6 and B&W are available if you choose to mix your own.
I hadn't seen this video before watching the link here last night, and I know his goal here was direct positives from the camera, but I'm wondering-could this same general approach(obviously without the daylight correction assuming using a tungsten enlarger, which is all I have) for RA4 reversal could be used to do direct positives from slides.
I'm only just seeing this thread, so I apologize for replying to an old post. I've also only discovered his channel in the past few weeks, but have loved it both for how thorough/methodical he is on everything, his technical explanations, and it doesn't hurt that he's in Central Kentucky(my happy place for photography and life in general...).
I hadn't seen this video before watching the link here last night, and I know his goal here was direct positives from the camera, but I'm wondering-could this same general approach(obviously without the daylight correction assuming using a tungsten enlarger, which is all I have) for RA4 reversal could be used to do direct positives from slides.
I know scanning is the easy route, but also never had the chance to print Ciba. I've never done color darkroom printing anyway, and want to start although obviously conventional RA4 is going to be the best way to do that. Still, though, it's something I wouldn't mind to play with if it's a viable option, and obviously RA4 is at least capable of a direct positive.
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