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Last week I was developing a test roll of tri-x and was surprised to find that on several frames, 4 consecutive, there appeared a vignetting effect. Each of the four corners of the frame had a white area of overexposure/overdevelopment. The rest of the roll was fine except for the last two frames which showed the same effect. I am at a loss as to why this has happened, and in an apparently inconsistent manner. I was shooting with a Nikon Fe, never any trouble, Tri-x 400 at EI of 320 and developed in a single tank of T-max with a 20% more development time of 7min 15 seconds.
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Justin:

 

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I doubt very seriously that this problem has anything at all to do

with the processing of the film. This was more than likely an

optical problem. The vignetting could have been caused by a number

of things. Did you use one or more filters on the lens? Did you use

a lens hood (some call it a shade)? If so, did you use it along with

the filter or filters? What was the focal length of the lens? Wide

angle lenses have this kind of problem quite often if too many

filters or the wrong hood are used. Was the lens a zoom? Some zooms

can vignette, especially with filters and hoods attached. I'm sure

that one or more of the things I've mentioned is the cause of your

problem.

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I tend to agree with Scott. One of the things I was cautioned about

when I went to buy a polarizer for my newly acuired wide angle lens

for my Pentax645, was to use the "thin" type filters to prevent

vignetting when using this lens. It's something to look at. Maybe

shoot a roll without any filters when in the wide angle mode?

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Justin...I to believe it was the filter causing vignetting. To check

this set the zoom on the widest (28mm) setting. Stop down the lens as

far as it will go (f22 or so. Then look through your camera as it is

pointed at the blue sky (not at the sun!). If it is your filter

vignetting the corners of the viewfinder will appear to be cutoff or

much darker then the center...jim

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