It was a Dark and Foggy Night...
Probably not.
At least not unless I decide to repeat that experiement.
It was after all, a long time ago, but I will see if I still have anything from that time.
You will not be impressed, though.
Once I saw how bad the fog was, I stopped experimenting.
It eats up somewhat more silver than the other emulsions I was making at the time and frankly, I was just curious.
I probably still have the quick and dirty test I did
before I put the emulsion away and forgot about it.
For the proof of concept,
I just put a dodge tool on a test sheet
and exposed it to light.
One exposure - & no test strips at all IIRC.
(This was a silhouette exposure so no midtones;
I did this because I knew there was a problem with low contrast/high fog )
The result I had desired was a black dodge tool on white paper,
but what came up in the developer was
a
dark grey dodge tool on
light grey paper.
After putting it on the drying rack,
I went to sleep and tried never to think about it again.
(I was discouraged and, not knowing what was causing the fog,
didn't want to waste any more time on it)
That was 1993 (?) or so... maybe now I should have another go at it?
The main thing is still not having a clue as to where to start making adjustments at.
I need to know more about DR theory before I approach it again.
I guess the first question is, Why ARE they so foggy anyway?
