snusmumriken
Subscriber
The most important factor is probably to know that characteristic curves are not completely "hammered in stone"!
Give me FP4+ or Delta 100 for example - both two being very versatile and flexible films in that regard - and I can create many different characteristic curves dependent on
- the specific developer used
- the specific dilution used
- the specific agitation rhythm used.
I can develop them just in the way I want / need for specific applications, with significantly different CCs.
For everyone who wants to optimize his BW developing results I can only highly recommend to use a densitometer and evaluate the characteristic curves.
Because that offers you all the information needed:
- real effective film speed of your film / developer combination
- behaviour of your comb. in the shadows, mid-tones and highlights
- you see immediately where certain problems have their origin with your individual workflow so far.
If BW film photographers would do that 90-95% of all questions concerning film development problems would dissappear.
A densitometer and CC evaluation is probably the most powerful tool you can use for optimizing your personal development process.
But unfortunately instead most photographers refuse to do it, come to forums and ask for the "magic bullet":
"Tell me, with what developer and time I have to develop film xy to get perfect results."
But it cannot work that way, as other photographers do use
- different cameras with different lightmeters which may vary to the ones you use by 1/3, 1/2 or even more stops
- the thermometers they use may also differ from yours, most photographers don't use calibrated ones
- their agitation method may differ as well.......
So the only way for perfect results for you, which you like and with which you are fully satiesfied with is to optimize your workflow for the equipment and procedures you are using.
With a very good, precise densitometer (e.g. Heiland TRD-2) and evaluating the CCs of your film-developer combinations exactly that is possible in a perfect way.
Best regards,
Henning
Henning, thanks, I do largely accept that a personalised approach is ideal. But OP asked what FP4+ has that HP5+ and Delta 100 don’t have. Several people have answered ‘tonality’. Are you saying that there is absolutely nothing common to all the characteristic curves of FP4+ with various developers that represents the characteristics of the emulsion per se? If so, then the answer to the OP can only be “intermediate granularity”, n’est-ce pas?