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- Feb 12, 2014
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I have been looking for a more efficient way to use water when developing film.
By chance I came across a consumer test of bottled water. It showed that one of the cheap supermarket brands had a very low mineral content. Only a fraction of that found in tap water and much less than other bottled water.
So, I mixed a batch of XTOL and fixer with it and developed a roll of 35mm T-MAX using the Ilford wash method. It worked brilliantly. The negatives came out very clear with no drying marks, even though I skipped Photo Flo.
Apart from the chemicals, I only used 2 litres of bottled water the whole process, which is the equivalent of runnning the tap for only a few minutes.
So, to me this seems like a good way to preserve water while getting good results.
Does anyone have similar experiences or any words of caution before I start using it all around?
(I should mention that distilled water is only available in pricey 0,5 litre bottles where I live, so I only use it to mix C-41 chems).
By chance I came across a consumer test of bottled water. It showed that one of the cheap supermarket brands had a very low mineral content. Only a fraction of that found in tap water and much less than other bottled water.
So, I mixed a batch of XTOL and fixer with it and developed a roll of 35mm T-MAX using the Ilford wash method. It worked brilliantly. The negatives came out very clear with no drying marks, even though I skipped Photo Flo.
Apart from the chemicals, I only used 2 litres of bottled water the whole process, which is the equivalent of runnning the tap for only a few minutes.
So, to me this seems like a good way to preserve water while getting good results.
Does anyone have similar experiences or any words of caution before I start using it all around?
(I should mention that distilled water is only available in pricey 0,5 litre bottles where I live, so I only use it to mix C-41 chems).


