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- Dec 31, 2006
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Hello All,
Back in the late 1960s, guys like Bob Schwalberg and Bill Pierce preached the use of sulfited Rodinal as a general purpose developer which (mostly) cut down on excess grain and (mostly) keep the sharp edge effects for which Rodinal was noted. It was sorta counterintuitive, but seemed to work well for me at the time.
Now, i understand the newer versions of Rodinal are "finer grained" and it is superfulous to add sulfite.
I went back to my old notebook and souped a roll of Tri-X 120 in 4.5% sodium sulfite and Fomadon R09 at 1:85, 12 minutes at 68F. The negs look ok--perhaps a bit soft in contrast. It's a combo worth fine tuning, methinks.
I would attempt to scan the negs and post them here; but all I have is a run-of-the-mill hp office jet scanner. Can anyone advise on whether or not it can be used to scan negatives--and if so, how? TIA
Back in the late 1960s, guys like Bob Schwalberg and Bill Pierce preached the use of sulfited Rodinal as a general purpose developer which (mostly) cut down on excess grain and (mostly) keep the sharp edge effects for which Rodinal was noted. It was sorta counterintuitive, but seemed to work well for me at the time.
Now, i understand the newer versions of Rodinal are "finer grained" and it is superfulous to add sulfite.
I went back to my old notebook and souped a roll of Tri-X 120 in 4.5% sodium sulfite and Fomadon R09 at 1:85, 12 minutes at 68F. The negs look ok--perhaps a bit soft in contrast. It's a combo worth fine tuning, methinks.
I would attempt to scan the negs and post them here; but all I have is a run-of-the-mill hp office jet scanner. Can anyone advise on whether or not it can be used to scan negatives--and if so, how? TIA
