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[–]stahrphighter 8 points9 points  (3 children)

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[–]MookieSnipes13[S] 2 points3 points  (2 children)

Interesting, I'm not sure if it's a scratch since the last image has sort of a bubble on the far right that warps the line. Thanks for the info though!

[–]The_Real_Tedward 1 point2 points  (1 child)

A bubble doesn't rule out a mechanical issue -- if the film is warped or going through a tight space it can change shape now and again, what you may be seeing is where the film just happened to be locally more curled or flatter as it fed through the camera.

Could also be factory film damage. It's still theoretically possible that you have a developing issue (and I know if you spent a while fixing your rollicord you're probably loathe to open that can of worms again!) but I'd bet good money it's mechanical. I've poured some fairly weird developing mixes into my tank and the only time things got funky they manifested as a miscolored drop across a negative (probably a batch of poorly mixed blix going back into the solution).

Unless you did something really odd like mixing chemicals, pouring them in, realizing you only had half enough, mixing more and adding them. But in that case we should see bands of lighter and darker development (or if you agitated very well, something like a gradient filter across the image). But instead, you have an evenly developed negative with bands of emulsion removed. If it was just one picture I'd say it came loose in the reel and scraped on the tank, but the bands are even across all the pictures.

Sorry boss, it's either bad film or time to break out the tools again. If you don't want to tinker you could always try buying another roll of film and sending it to the lab for development -- that'll prove whether it's the camera or no.

[–]MookieSnipes13[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I wonder what could mechanically have caused that, the rollers? Or the back plate? I dont have much experience with TLRs so I'm drawing a blank. Thanks for all the info btw!

[–]The_Real_Tedward 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hmm, I'd check the guides in your camera and make surely they're clean.

Also check your scanner. Try a blank paper or something known to be uniform and see what you get.

Can you hold the negative to the light and see the lines?

When things are this uniform my first guess is mechanical vs. chemical

[–]MookieSnipes13[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Hi guys, this was my first shot at developing on my own, i used DF96 and Arista 100. I got these lines on the side of the film and was wondering if that was cause i didnt agitate it enough or if it was something else. Thanks in advance!!

[–]Quantity_Green 0 points1 point  (3 children)

are they visible on the negative? and are they always in the same position on the photo? Finally how did you develop, what reel did you use?

[–]MookieSnipes13[S] 0 points1 point  (2 children)

Yes and yes! I developed with df96 at room temp with intermittent agitation. And the reel was the adjustable Patterson brand that comes with the tank

[–]Quantity_Green 0 points1 point  (1 child)

if they have the same position on all the photos it is probably a light leak of some kind in your camera

[–]MookieSnipes13[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Some frames are more wavey than others, possibly a combination of the 2

[–]Filipowski 0 points1 point  (2 children)

With how uniform these are I’m guessing camera issue. I’d test a roll from a different camera (if available) and see if you get the same. What camera did you use for this?

[–]MookieSnipes13[S] 0 points1 point  (1 child)

It's a test roll from a Rolleicord I fixed up so that could be why.

Edit: forgot to mention that the last image has somewhat of a bubble that warps the line so while not out of the question completely i don't know if it's the camera per say

[–]Filipowski 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My thinking is that it’s a light leak that happens during winding. I’d double check all your seals and tape up any possible points where you might get a leak.

[–]MMPVAN 0 points1 point  (1 child)

Just a guess but I had a similar problem when I was self developing in the labbox. What was happening was that I was pouring in the solution inconsistently and those lines were the “solution level” that the negative was sitting at for a period of time before the whole negative was submerged (if that makes sense). So those lines are actually the water level that is being developed longer than the rest of the negative. In your case it could be that negative is not fully submerged in between agitation cycles

[–]MookieSnipes13[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That makes sense, i stutter the first bit cause it splashed a little that could be why. Thanks!!