user237428934
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Half a year ago I began developing and so far I devloped 20 films at home. I have an analog to digital workflow with developing and then scanning the best ones. The development process is always the standard one that was recommended in the manual of the developer (Tetenal Ultrafin plus).
So far I really like the look of Fuji Acros 100 best and I printed some of them with my Canon Pro 9000 on thick matte museum paper. The clean look of this film is what I really like, some might even say it looks almost digital.
(Examples of the Acros-look I like
http://thomaswphotos.wordpress.com/2010/11/07/orte_nizza/film09_15/
http://thomaswphotos.wordpress.com/2010/11/09/orte-nizza2/film09_05/ )
Neopan 400 at 1600 is very nice as experiment but I don't get anything useful out of Nepoan 400 or Tri-X at 400.
My problem is that I don't risk to make development variations. On every film I bring home there is at least one photo I don't want to lose. So it's always better to use the standard-process where I know that I don't risk spoiling it all.
Basically I see two options for solving this dilemma.
- Doing a lot of test films with variations in development (probably even changing the developer) to see if I can get better results out of Neopan 400.
- Using Acros 100 only because this works right now and doing the rest digital.
I know that 20 films is not enough to be perfect but I'm not the man with a lot of patience so option 1 could easily fail.
How did you solve this when you were not content with your development results?
Thanks
Tom
So far I really like the look of Fuji Acros 100 best and I printed some of them with my Canon Pro 9000 on thick matte museum paper. The clean look of this film is what I really like, some might even say it looks almost digital.
(Examples of the Acros-look I like
http://thomaswphotos.wordpress.com/2010/11/07/orte_nizza/film09_15/
http://thomaswphotos.wordpress.com/2010/11/09/orte-nizza2/film09_05/ )
Neopan 400 at 1600 is very nice as experiment but I don't get anything useful out of Nepoan 400 or Tri-X at 400.
My problem is that I don't risk to make development variations. On every film I bring home there is at least one photo I don't want to lose. So it's always better to use the standard-process where I know that I don't risk spoiling it all.
Basically I see two options for solving this dilemma.
- Doing a lot of test films with variations in development (probably even changing the developer) to see if I can get better results out of Neopan 400.
- Using Acros 100 only because this works right now and doing the rest digital.
I know that 20 films is not enough to be perfect but I'm not the man with a lot of patience so option 1 could easily fail.
How did you solve this when you were not content with your development results?
Thanks
Tom