Hi all -
Another year ticked off the list. 52 today. Decided to do something nice to celebrate - got up early, had an espresso, and dragged the 4x5 to a local creek. 30 degrees, but felt damn good. Shot six sheets. Was feeling great when I left. Got home, developed the film, but my fixer turned out to be WAY bad. Precipitated sulfur. I ended up washing for close to two hours all told in my rotary tank. Still had a layer of scum on the film, but no apparent damage to the emulsion. Only way to remedy the situation was to wipe (twice) with a wet microfiber cloth. Made it presentable. Of the four sheets I developed today (one tankful), two were repeats (thought I'd pulled the holder on one so I reshot it), and one felt lacking. The best of the bunch is below. I have new fixer on the way; I'll develop the last two sheets when it gets here. I'll revisit today's chaff later.
Hay Creek by Scott, on Flickr
Hay Creek in Birdsboro, PA. Have been there millions of times, but never this stretch of it. Shot with a Fujinon-W 125/5.6 on FP4+.
Thanks for looking.
Scott
Hay Creek...
Re: Hay Creek...
Happy belated birthday, Scott! And that turned out very nicely for all the tribulations...
Robert
Robert
Re: Hay Creek...
HAPPY BDay!!!
I use one shot fixer now, but not so long ago I used to keep coffee paper filters for this; filter the fixer through 2 layers of paper filter when you see sulfur. The colloidal sulfur is hard to get rid of, but most of the largest partciles were trapped.
Its not perfect but most of the scum goes away.
I use one shot fixer now, but not so long ago I used to keep coffee paper filters for this; filter the fixer through 2 layers of paper filter when you see sulfur. The colloidal sulfur is hard to get rid of, but most of the largest partciles were trapped.
Its not perfect but most of the scum goes away.
Re: Hay Creek...
Thanks Alex!
Thanks Robert - I'm happy with it too. And with everyone in the house otherwise occupied or out, it kept me entertained all afternoon.
Thank you Pablo. You'll have to explain one-shot fixer to me. I've been using Kodafix since I started developing film. The last bottle of concentrate that I pulled from yesterday was dated 2012, so I guess it was time. And I overuse my fixer horribly. I need to keep track of how many rolls/sheets I put through it. I generally don't mix new until I see a change in the fixing action. I used to throw a copper penny into the mixer and if it plated silver I'd dump it.titrisol wrote: ↑Thu Dec 10, 2020 8:49 amHAPPY BDay!!!
I use one shot fixer now, but not so long ago I used to keep coffee paper filters for this; filter the fixer through 2 layers of paper filter when you see sulfur. The colloidal sulfur is hard to get rid of, but most of the largest partciles were trapped.
Its not perfect but most of the scum goes away.
Re: Hay Creek...
Since my consumption of film and fixer has diminished tremendously (from 20 to 1-2 rolls a month) I don't reuse fixer anymore
I use ilford fixer at 1+4 and dump it after a developing session
That way the silver level is minimal as well
I use ilford fixer at 1+4 and dump it after a developing session
That way the silver level is minimal as well
- PFMcFarland
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Re: Hay Creek...
Happy Birthday, Scott! Doesn't look like your age has diminished your photography skills.
PF
PF
Waiting for the light
Re: Hay Creek...
You know, having worked at a wastewater treatment plant, I wonder what the local, small municipal WWTP sees in their testing when I dump old, heavy silver fixer down the drain...
Thanks Alex and PF!PFMcFarland wrote: ↑Thu Dec 10, 2020 10:01 pmHappy Birthday, Scott! Doesn't look like your age has diminished your photography skills.
PF
Re: Hay Creek...
Dilution is the solution !!!
LOL
Fixer can get to 12-15g/L and most municipal plant cringe at more than 5g/L; so depending on how much you dump (1gal ~60g) you may want to dilute it 1:5 or 1:10 with water which compared to how much comes out of your neighborhood or town they may see a tiny spike or they may see nothing
LOL
Fixer can get to 12-15g/L and most municipal plant cringe at more than 5g/L; so depending on how much you dump (1gal ~60g) you may want to dilute it 1:5 or 1:10 with water which compared to how much comes out of your neighborhood or town they may see a tiny spike or they may see nothing
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