Good results, but please post your chemical formulas and process for these old films, because that is true darkroom wizardry.. it makes you the Darkroom Alchemist.
Hi Pedro! Thank you for watching. I used the same BW film processing as the Verichrome Pan film on the other video- Parodinal Film developer diluted 1:100, developed for 1 hour, then washed with water and fixed with plain fixer solution.
Just 7/12 this time ,huh? I guess the first camera owner (farm truck and kid photos) was a better photographer? Or does it just mean that film was in better condition?
Considering the films were of the brand and type, the first film was probably stored in a better climate or better conditions-drier conditions preserve the film better. The marks on the second film appear more often during moist conditions.
Great find, I'm always amazed these films develop after all these years.
Good results, but please post your chemical formulas and process for these old films, because that is true darkroom wizardry.. it makes you the Darkroom Alchemist.
Hi Pedro! Thank you for watching. I used the same BW film processing as the Verichrome Pan film on the other video- Parodinal Film developer diluted 1:100, developed for 1 hour, then washed with water and fixed with plain fixer solution.
Just 7/12 this time ,huh? I guess the first camera owner (farm truck and kid photos) was a better photographer? Or does it just mean that film was in better condition?
Considering the films were of the brand and type, the first film was probably stored in a better climate or better conditions-drier conditions preserve the film better. The marks on the second film appear more often during moist conditions.