Cobble
Warf Street
Portland, Maine
I'm tasking myself in 2011 to expose at least one roll of film per month. I'll scan and post one photograph (or more...), good, bad or indifferent, as part of my process. This is my first image in my project.
Roll 1 development notes:
I developed my Kodak 35mm Tri-X film in D-76, mixed at a 1:1 ratio, for 10 minutes at 68° F. The development tank was gently agitated in a figure eight motion for the first 30 seconds, and then agitated for five seconds at 30 second intervals. I then immediately filled the tank with water (68° F) to stop development. Next, I drained the tank and filled it with fixer and processed as with the developer (outlined above) for five minutes. I washed the film once more with water for one minute, drained, and added fixer remover. This was gently agitated for two minutes. ...washed the film again with water for five minutes and removed it from the reel. Lastly, I ran the film through some "photo flo" to limit water from spotting the negatives while drying. ...hung to dry.
Flickr Explore - January 10, 2011
Cobble
Warf Street
Portland, Maine
I'm tasking myself in 2011 to expose at least one roll of film per month. I'll scan and post one photograph (or more...), good, bad or indifferent, as part of my process. This is my first image in my project.
Roll 1 development notes:
I developed my Kodak 35mm Tri-X film in D-76, mixed at a 1:1 ratio, for 10 minutes at 68° F. The development tank was gently agitated in a figure eight motion for the first 30 seconds, and then agitated for five seconds at 30 second intervals. I then immediately filled the tank with water (68° F) to stop development. Next, I drained the tank and filled it with fixer and processed as with the developer (outlined above) for five minutes. I washed the film once more with water for one minute, drained, and added fixer remover. This was gently agitated for two minutes. ...washed the film again with water for five minutes and removed it from the reel. Lastly, I ran the film through some "photo flo" to limit water from spotting the negatives while drying. ...hung to dry.
Flickr Explore - January 10, 2011