IOWA CAMERA GUY
Member
hi all!
shout out koraks (I think it was him) who put me on to microphen.
I love the developer, but it's very contrasty. It's actually perfect contrast - but I'm interested in seeing if I can reduce contrast somehow.
Is there some sort of chemical I can add/reduce in the id68/microphen formula - or some sort of treatment I can do to produce less contrast with it?
ty!
I don’t know if you got the correct information on what is causing your contrast issue.
There are 3 parts to developing b/w film - assuming you have properly mixed the chemistry (duh!): Time, temperature and agitation.
Generally speaking time and temperature control the DENSITY of the negative.
The amount of agitation you use will affect the CONTRAST.
More agitation (more vigorous or longer time) will affect the contrast.
With more agitation, fresh(er) chemistry washes over the surface of the film more often and provides more/better developing action.
Everybody seems to have their own magic bullet for this, but a reasonable rule of thumb, for ’normal results’ is 5 seconds of agitation every 30 seconds.
That involves about 2-3 full tank inversions, just swishing the tank around won't do it, inversions physically move fresh(er) chemistry THROUGH THE SPIRALS OF THE FILM, which swishing around won't do as well or as thoroughly.
To improve the contrast of the negative do 3 or 4 inversions instead of 2.
Of course if you did continuous agitation then the contrast would increase much more, but that isn't usually where you want to go.
FIRST, set up a standard development time and a consistent agitation procedure, THEN you can make changes as you gain experience.
My basic plan was 68F, 8 to 8-1/2 minutes as a starting point and meticulous exposure.
I’ve done everything from B/W to E-4 and E-6 slide film and color printing, so pretty much done it all.
60+ years in photo, owned/ran a camera store for 50 years.
Good luck.