kemal_mumcu
Well-known
Hi all, summer has come here in my part of the world and that means a lot of sun. I was wanting to take normal TriX 400 and pull it to 200. Would this just mean less development time?
I recently noticed since doing my own B&W development that in general all my B&W M2 work was generally underdeveloped/underexposed. I took a metered Olympus that I use for slides and which has a great meter and I noticed that the negatives were again generally underdeveloped. So i started overdeveloping by 15 - 20% and I found the results much more to my liking. Is this common? I have noticed that other RFFs have mentioned overcooking their film for better results.
Does this mean that I can take my TriX - shoot it at 200 and develop it as per the recommendations on Kodak's website?
Any help would be appreciated. 🙂
I recently noticed since doing my own B&W development that in general all my B&W M2 work was generally underdeveloped/underexposed. I took a metered Olympus that I use for slides and which has a great meter and I noticed that the negatives were again generally underdeveloped. So i started overdeveloping by 15 - 20% and I found the results much more to my liking. Is this common? I have noticed that other RFFs have mentioned overcooking their film for better results.
Does this mean that I can take my TriX - shoot it at 200 and develop it as per the recommendations on Kodak's website?
Any help would be appreciated. 🙂