Gasha <[email protected]> wrote: >Hi all, > >Semi stand-in is the way to go. >I got some interesting results (also some craps with Lucky film), and at >least 2 cases, when top 1/4 part was with different contrast (perhaps >temperature difference). > >Rodinal 1:100 works great. Just do one inversion after 10-15 minutes or >so, and total time 1 hour. > >I tried to do some prints, after several years of semi-stand-in and >figured, that wet darkroom prints lack contrast. > >Now, i have switched back to regular development (since i got brand new >Ilford tank).
I need to get back into shooting and developing my own B&W film. Even if I just scan the negatives and print digitally. My department is considering adding a Photography Minor to our program. As far as I can tell, having a B&W film photography course is pretty much standard for a Photography Minor, but some schools are actually skipping darkroom printing and just teaching the processing of negatives along with scanning. Anethma to me (and still not viable for a Photography Major, thankfully) but it's probably the way of the future. -- PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List [email protected] http://pdml.net/mailman/listinfo/pdml_pdml.net to UNSUBSCRIBE from the PDML, please visit the link directly above and follow the directions.

