Black n White Photo Lovers - Minoltian


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-7- said:
......chiminology......I'm totally lost.... u guys sound so pro + expert to me ler.... I always tell myself: gotta pick up, gotta pick up... :cry: :cry:

Hey Gokuu, do you process your own film? :dunno:
 

Hi The_Cheat... obviously I don't... I normally sent in all my B&W negatives to Ruby...with the contact print as the end product...

Till last week, I sent in a roll of my latest shot B&W Ilford to Kex for scanning...

guys, still wondering whether I should keep my digital forms in TIFF or JPEG ler... personnaly I would wanna have it done in TIFF file, any opinions??? :dunno:
 

Bren said:
Agitation for 5 sec every minute.
I think the contrast is a bit low, so i'm still
increasing the development times till i get
a good negative. Sort of going for the compensating
effect with low agitation and longer development times.


maybe try agitating every 2 mins?
 

-7- said:
guys, still wondering whether I should keep my digital forms in TIFF or JPEG ler... personnaly I would wanna have it done in TIFF file, any opinions??? :dunno:

I always keep in TIFF, and used JPEG for final output only.

But TIFF is huge :)
 

deslim27 said:
I always keep in TIFF, and used JPEG for final output only.

But TIFF is huge :)


Thanks Deslim,

I share the same opinion as yours...

Guys n gals,

Planning for a short break in early May, thinking of Tioman Island...any recommendation on the resorts over there?

Cheers
 

hoppinghippo said:
maybe try agitating every 2 mins?

Thanks, will try it when i standardize my present conditions.
too many variables to take care of..
 

I am suprised so many newbies into b&w photography! I though younger photograhers are all into digital. Afterall, its a click of a button to get b&w result.

Some pointers to start here about b&w photography. CN films that uses C41 to process is a different catagory of b&w photography. It works the same as color negatives; i.e the images produced on the negative consist of dyes. Whereas images from true b&w negatives are make up of silver compond. Therefore, the resulting print will also look different. CN film is less grainy but lack contrast and sharpness compared to normal b&w film.

b&w photography is about manipulating the original colours in the subject. You use different filters to to produce different results. Red to lighten red and darken blue sky, yellow to increse skin tone contrast, green to lighten leaves,.....

Other controls are in the processing. agitate more or increase temperature or increase concentration to increase contrast, and vis vesa.

any more questions? If you guys interested, let me know than we can meet up at the SEEDS?
 

Pro-New said:
I am suprised so many newbies into b&w photography! I though younger photograhers are all into digital. Afterall, its a click of a button to get b&w result.

Some pointers to start here about b&w photography. CN films that uses C41 to process is a different catagory of b&w photography. It works the same as color negatives; i.e the images produced on the negative consist of dyes. Whereas images from true b&w negatives are make up of silver compond. Therefore, the resulting print will also look different. CN film is less grainy but lack contrast and sharpness compared to normal b&w film.

b&w photography is about manipulating the original colours in the subject. You use different filters to to produce different results. Red to lighten red and darken blue sky, yellow to increse skin tone contrast, green to lighten leaves,.....

Other controls are in the processing. agitate more or increase temperature or increase concentration to increase contrast, and vis vesa.

any more questions? If you guys interested, let me know than we can meet up at the SEEDS?

Wah! Another pro ah!! Good good good...

Actually I need somebody to teach me how to process the b&w film. What's the basic setup, and how to do it. Got a roll of tri-x that have only 10 exposure to play around with, see... :D
 

The_Cheat said:
Wah! Another pro ah!! Good good good...

Actually I need somebody to teach me how to process the b&w film. What's the basic setup, and how to do it. Got a roll of tri-x that have only 10 exposure to play around with, see... :D


:thumbsup: :thumbsup: :thumbsup: :thumbsup: :thumbsup: yeah!!!! let's learn together!!! :lovegrin:

Q1: Well, let's start with what are the basic apparatus / chemicals we need if we are processing a) True B&W Film b) CN B&W Film

Q2: Self reading book on B&W DIY recommendation... :sweat:

Cheers!!
 

Wahzz..some many b & w enthus...me too super newbie only shot one roll of b & w but like it alot...
Where do u guys develop ur film???..In ur personal darkroom or a darkroom of a club???..
 

Oh ya n wat filters do u guys usually use???.
Cokin or normal screw ons???..Wanna noe what u guys think...
 

Paperkurt said:
Oh ya n wat filters do u guys usually use???.
Cokin or normal screw ons???..Wanna noe what u guys think...

Just to share my very shallow experience...

Negative Processing: send in to Ruby
End result: Contact Print by Ruby / 8R Print out by Ruby / My Epson photo printer
Filters: Polariser, Orange Cockin (going to get a red filter to try soon) :devil:
 

Anyone has this experience that the b&w film processing done by Ruby seems to be too high in contrast (seems to me like over development)??

I seem to have this problem with Ruby all the time ... lose details and makes printing difficult. But it could be just me ...

End of the day, do the processing yourself!!
 

Jerry said:
Anyone has this experience that the b&w film processing done by Ruby seems to be too high in contrast (seems to me like over development)??

I seem to have this problem with Ruby all the time ... lose details and makes printing difficult. But it could be just me ...

End of the day, do the processing yourself!!

Maybe it has to do with how you expose your film?
 

Jerry said:
Anyone has this experience that the b&w film processing done by Ruby seems to be too high in contrast (seems to me like over development)??

I seem to have this problem with Ruby all the time ... lose details and makes printing difficult. But it could be just me ...

End of the day, do the processing yourself!!

haha......Do it yourself man..... ;) .......For ilford films check the barcode on the films and see if they flare out, if it is......then they overcook it. For kodak films.....it's the same......juzt check if the words on the film are flare.....

It also depends on the exposure like hippo say. If you like to over-expose your films.....you gotta balance out the DEV time.....and temperature also matters too...I usually start at 18 degrees and I don't use stop baths. I only use water bath before I fix the films. This is to let the shadow details process more......
 

Jerry, if you tend to expose for the shadows.....then I'll suggest you process your films yourself. That guy doing your films maybe processing it longer, maybe temp higher, chemical use more then instructed.

All these factors add together will cook the negs man !!

Or if you want him to do it.....monitor his processing to see if it's consistence.....then you adjust your exposures accordingly.
 

To Vader,

Cool!!! by checking the barcode and we can know whether soembody has overcooked the negatives... I just learned a new thign today! Thanks! :lovegrin:

but, the definition of flare on the wording or the barcode...ermmm... :wink: i think mine should be the normal case one... flare as in the barcode or the wording goes out of shape? something like burn out? :sweat: Anyway, my instinct says that they are just right condition.

To Jerry,

Do not know whether this phenomena is camera dependency, as i do believe ones system metering (if aperture priority is used for your case) is not always 100% calibrated. This may be a relatively not so significant factor as compared to negative processing / exposure during the shot. anyway, my normal practice, when I load in Kodak TMAX negative in my Dynax5, -1 Stop is always my practice as previous rolls told me that my photos tend to white wash, and theyhad no priniting shop dependency found. nowadays I prefer Ilford and so far I only set -1 Stop for 3200 negative and it is not due to the overcooked issue, but to gain the mood of the photos...
Above opinions are solely my own experience (only based on <20 rolls of B&W films shot), better refer to those like Vader and the rest...

Cheers!! :cool:
 

-7- said:
To Vader,

Cool!!! by checking the barcode and we can know whether soembody has overcooked the negatives... I just learned a new thign today! Thanks! :lovegrin:

but, the definition of flare on the wording or the barcode...ermmm... :wink: i think mine should be the normal case one... flare as in the barcode or the wording goes out of shape? something like burn out? :sweat: Anyway, my instinct says that they are just right condition.

To Jerry,

Do not know whether this phenomena is camera dependency, as i do believe ones system metering (if aperture priority is used for your case) is not always 100% calibrated. This may be a relatively not so significant factor as compared to negative processing / exposure during the shot. anyway, my normal practice, when I load in Kodak TMAX negative in my Dynax5, -1 Stop is always my practice as previous rolls told me that my photos tend to white wash, and theyhad no priniting shop dependency found. nowadays I prefer Ilford and so far I only set -1 Stop for 3200 negative and it is not due to the overcooked issue, but to gain the mood of the photos...
Above opinions are solely my own experience (only based on <20 rolls of B&W films shot), better refer to those like Vader and the rest...

Cheers!! :cool:

The words or barcode should be solid...you are right man, out of shape may be a better word to explain.

Ermmm, care to get your camera metering check?

-1 stop.......means that shadow details will be lost...hmmm.

My take on 3200 iso b/w is I usually rate it at 1600 iso but I process it at 3200 iso. I rate it at 1600 iso and process it at 1600 iso results in a very "thin" neg, can barely see details on the negs.

I always try to meter for the best average exposure...so that printing it will not be so hard.....

I find that RGB process B/W very contrast.....too dark negs...we call that "orr tao u" or "black soy sauce"
 

vader said:
The words or barcode should be solid...you are right man, out of shape may be a better word to explain.

Ermmm, care to get your camera metering check?

-1 stop.......means that shadow details will be lost...hmmm.

My take on 3200 iso b/w is I usually rate it at 1600 iso but I process it at 3200 iso. I rate it at 1600 iso and process it at 1600 iso results in a very "thin" neg, can barely see details on the negs.

I always try to meter for the best average exposure...so that printing it will not be so hard.....

I find that RGB process B/W very contrast.....too dark negs...we call that "orr tao u" or "black soy sauce"


Hi Vad,

I was told by the Ruby old guy (sorry, though I always chat to him, still can't remember his name...) once that Ilford Delta 3200 is actually designed based on ISO 1600 and he said it is not really 3200... so he told me that shot at 1600 is a wise choice. I did not know abt the thickness of the neg. fact. hmmm...2nd thing I learned today from u, what a fruitful day I have!! :rbounce:

No experience with Ruby for B&W yet, so far only slides with them. How's ur experience with Ruby then? :think:

To be frank, I do not think it's my Dynax5 metering prob. it only occurs on Kodak TMax films... not on Ilford so far. :)
 

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