grainyvision
Subscriber
I'm working on a... unique formula for an environmentally friendly ascorbic-acid only developer. Basically something really designed so that you could mix it with things mostly from around the house. Current ingredients:
* ascorbic acid
* sodium oxalate (potentially optional, chelating agent, should help shelf-life and seems to prevent the pH shift that ascorbic acid radicals have. May regenerate ascorbic acid like sulfite does with other developing agents -- can also be substituted with easier sourced oxalic acid and appropriate amount of hydroxide)
* sodium carbonate (to make a buffer)
* sodium hydroxide (pH is ~12.5)
* potassium bromide (seems possible to replace with sodium chloride in the future to make it more "household")
However, I always get dingy borders unless I add benzotriazole. The developer is extremely eco-friendly aside from that addition. It also produces very nice distinctly cold tone results with very deep blacks and seems to last a few hours once the alkali is added. However, without the benzotriazole I always get dingy borders with either warm orange fogging with just a little bromide added, or more subtle grey fogging with a surplus of bromide.
Is there any eco-friendly and preferably "household" ingredient that can be used here? I've observed that oxalate can in some cases behave like a very weak anti-foggant, but not to the extent needed without a very large amount, an amount requiring the higher solubility of potassium oxalate which is a lot harder to source and of course more expensive. I plan on keeping the final solution in 2 parts, the ascorbic acid is kept naturally acidic which seems to keep on the shelf significantly better. I've also tried using lower alkalinity, but all tests thus far toward that were not good (10m+ dev time and with weak blacks).
And before someone says it, yes, I know I could add a smidge of phenidone and probably have something that works great at lower alkalinity and with less fogging tendency. I'm just trying this for purely experimental and creative purposes and because I've never seen a suitable ascorbic acid only print developer. The results are also very nice and somewhat variable contrast/exposure due to how shadows develop. Definitely colder tones than I've seen from pretty much any cold tone developer I've tried, with or without the benzotriazole. Example print attached (Ilford MGIV portfolio postcard paper)
* ascorbic acid
* sodium oxalate (potentially optional, chelating agent, should help shelf-life and seems to prevent the pH shift that ascorbic acid radicals have. May regenerate ascorbic acid like sulfite does with other developing agents -- can also be substituted with easier sourced oxalic acid and appropriate amount of hydroxide)
* sodium carbonate (to make a buffer)
* sodium hydroxide (pH is ~12.5)
* potassium bromide (seems possible to replace with sodium chloride in the future to make it more "household")
However, I always get dingy borders unless I add benzotriazole. The developer is extremely eco-friendly aside from that addition. It also produces very nice distinctly cold tone results with very deep blacks and seems to last a few hours once the alkali is added. However, without the benzotriazole I always get dingy borders with either warm orange fogging with just a little bromide added, or more subtle grey fogging with a surplus of bromide.
Is there any eco-friendly and preferably "household" ingredient that can be used here? I've observed that oxalate can in some cases behave like a very weak anti-foggant, but not to the extent needed without a very large amount, an amount requiring the higher solubility of potassium oxalate which is a lot harder to source and of course more expensive. I plan on keeping the final solution in 2 parts, the ascorbic acid is kept naturally acidic which seems to keep on the shelf significantly better. I've also tried using lower alkalinity, but all tests thus far toward that were not good (10m+ dev time and with weak blacks).
And before someone says it, yes, I know I could add a smidge of phenidone and probably have something that works great at lower alkalinity and with less fogging tendency. I'm just trying this for purely experimental and creative purposes and because I've never seen a suitable ascorbic acid only print developer. The results are also very nice and somewhat variable contrast/exposure due to how shadows develop. Definitely colder tones than I've seen from pretty much any cold tone developer I've tried, with or without the benzotriazole. Example print attached (Ilford MGIV portfolio postcard paper)