BW reversal options

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dafy

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Hi guys, I'm scanning a lot of my old stuff, and am just coming to realize how awesome Scala was in 35mm format. I'm currently using Rollei ATP 1.1 and have heard "a little" about Fomapan R100. In short, is there any 35mm (or MF...I plan on getting either a Rollei or another Pentax 6x7 most likely) BW reversal film available that can be home processed? I've never tried this before, obviously, usually just use regular negatives.

I'd love to be able to get slides (with full tones) out of ATP 1.1. Slides in general just seem to scan way better on my Minolta. But I'm still learning how to use it lol.

Do I have any options?

Thanks:smile:

Shawn
 
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You can pretty much use any black and white film you like and reversal process it yourself. You'll have to mix up the bleach and clearing bath from scratch, but the powders are cheap and fairly safe if you use the right precautions. The potassium permanganate is a little dangerous, but as long as you wear gloves and a dust mask when mixing, you'll be fine as long as you dont do something silly like mistake it for grape kool-aid :D. Also use rubber gloves while developing (I've heard about the methol in Dektol causing problems with some peoples' skin. That should be enough incintive to use gloves, but the bleach and clear bath could cause problems, too. IDK how dangerous they are in liquid form, but it's best to be safe).

I've been reversal processing FP4+ for a little less than a year. Here's my process and chemicals

Developer: Dektol 1:2 (paper strength)

Stop Bath: Arista branded stop bath at normal working strength

Bleach Bath:
(Step 1) Mix 4 grams of potassium permanganate with 1 liter of water.
(Step 2) Mix 54.5 grams of sodium metabisulfate with 1 liter of water.
(Step 3) Mix these two liquids 1:1 to the required amount (you dont need to use the whole liter of each. They can be stored for a while)


Clearing Bath: Mix 30 grams of sodium metabisulfite with 1 liter of water.

Fixer: any fixer you like, preferably a hardening fixer because the bleach and clearing bath soften the piss out of the emulsion



Process (at 68F or 20C):

1) Prewash in distilled water. I prewash for 2 min.

2) Develop in paper strength Dektol (1 part Dektol: 2 parts water) for 12 minuted with constant gentle agitation. Dont pour the developer in the sink or waste bucket. Keep it because you'll use it again.

3) Stop Bath for 30 seconds with constant agitation

4) Bleach for 5 minutes. This takes out the image that has just been developed but leaves the undeveloped silver.

5) Clearing Bath for 3 minutes. The bleach leaves a brownish yellowish stain. The clearing bath takes that out.

6) Wash with distilled water. I believe Ilford suggests three changes of water, but I do one. I agitate for 1 minute then dump the water.

7) Take the film out of the tank. You can keep it on the reel if you like. Hold the reel about a foot away from a 75 or 100 watt light bulb (the light bulb should be uncovered by a shade) so the light can shine through it. Hold that side about a foot away for about 2 or 3 minutes, rotating it so shadows dont cause any problems. After 2-3 minutes, flip the reel over and hold the opposite side to the light for 2-3 minutes, rotating it slowly so any shadows dont cause any problems.

This step exposes the unexposed and undevelop silver left in the film. Dont worry about overexposing the film at this step. Underexposure is far more likely.

8) Develop the film in the Dektol you saved from the first developer stage for 3 to 4 minutes constant agitation. This step is done to completion so time isnt super critical

9) Stop bath for 30 seconds with constant agitation

10) Wash with distilled water for about a minute then dump

11) Fix with your favorite fixer. A Hardening fixer is useful since the emulsion is weakened by the bleaching process. You can literally peel the emulsion off if you're not careful (Trust me :D). If you're careful, you'll have no problems, though

12) Wash using the Ilford method and dry in a dust-free environment

13) Mount, project, and enjoy

I dont pour the chemicals down the drain. I collect them in 5 gallon buckets and take them to the hazardous material dropoff site we have in Decatur every month. they dont ask too many questions about what I'm using the chemicals for. They just want to know what I'm bringing. I make a list of the ingredients in every chemical and hand it to whoever's doing the collecting. I dont know if they require a list or not here. They might throw it away without looking at or they might file it away. I dont care after they take the chemicals from me :D
 
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dafy

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Wow, thanks so much, very informative:smile:

>>13) Mount, project, and enjoy

I'm completely new at this (reversal processing), I don't plan on projecting, but scanning for print output. My experience with slides (minimal - some Velvia, Astia, Provia and that awesome and awesomely fragile stuff from Polaroid, the blue instant process at home stuff...neat stuff...and some Scala of course) has recently led me to see that they are quite often less grainy, have a better tonality, etc. than many of my negatives. Not always, but enough for me to want to try ATP 1.1 (which is a lot like TechPan) as a positive because of it's grain-free (sic) nature.

Do you think it's worth the effort/learning curve here? Or is this normally only done for projecting?

Shawn
 

holmburgers

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There's a good reason why reversal processing produces less grain. I'll do my best to explain it...

So, in an emulsion, regardless of speed, there is some variety in the sensitivity of grains; some are bigger and more sensitive, others are smaller and less sensitive.

In the initial exposure, the picture taking, these larger & faster grains are affected first and become developable to a larger degree than the smaller less sensitive ones. BUT, since in the reversal process you are bleaching away the negative silver image, you are removing these larger grains. You then fog and expose the remaining silver halides, which by default have to be the slower, finer grains. 2nd developer and voila you are left with a positive image composed of the emulsion's finest grains.

So yes, it's worth it, unless you want to make darkroom prints someday down the road.
 

michaelbsc

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First @ExistingLight, thanks a million for a clear step by step.

... My experience with slides (minimal - some Velvia, Astia, Provia and that awesome and awesomely fragile stuff from Polaroid, the blue instant process at home stuff...neat stuff...and some Scala of course) has recently led me to see that they are quite often less grainy, have a better tonality, etc. than many of my negatives.

You need to be careful in generalizing about E6 slides to B&W reversal processed slides. In E6 all of the silver is removed and the image is formed from the remaining dye clouds. In reversal processed B&W the unexposed silver from the original negative is used to form the positive image. So there will be sliver grain in the positives. As holmburgers points out, the remaining positive image is formed mostly from the smaller crystals. But they aren't grainless.

I don't know how the Scala reversal process worked, so I can't say about that.

Regardless, this is yet another tool to put in your toolbag. You can give it a whirl, I surely will, and if it works then you've got a keeper. If it turns out that it's not what you expected, then you've still learned a new skill that will be handy one day.
 

holmburgers

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Oh, one should certainly mention dr5 if you're not aware. They process all types of b&w film in reversal and do a fantastic job at a reasonable price. Turnaround is another thing; but you can't rush a good thing, eh?

www.dr5chrome.com
 
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dafy

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Thanks guys, I'll definitely try it. My only concern, hopefully understandable, is the idea of using Dektol with Rollei ATP. I'd end up with a pure black and white image if I did that with Tech Pan lol (indeed I used Dektol to get golf-ball sized grain on occasion with 'regular' emulsions). Would Dektol be a good starting point for this film...which is not especially pictorial under most circumstances? Maybe start using the process above but replace Dektol with the Recommended developer, SPUR?

Or am I missing something? I've still got to read these responses a lot to realize what is happening chemically...

edit: thanks for the link, may come in handy. But I really like to try and do things myself, so I'll give it a whirl:smile:

edit 2: what about my old favourite, PMK Pyro, any thoughts on that for this process?
 
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I've never scanned any of my slides yet, so I dont know how well they scan. Have you ever scanned black and white negs? If you get good results with negs, I see no reason you couldnt scan black and white slides equally well. I'm just assuming, though. Dont take my word for gospel :smile:

I've found reversal processed FP4 to be very fine grained. I get withing a few feet of the screen to see the grain (BTW, I used a screen in my photography classrooms, so maybe 50 inches on the long side. One thing to keep in mind is the slower films are a bit more contrasty than slower films, im my experience (and stated by ilford in their reversal processing pdf). If ATP is a very slow film, you might find the contrast unuseable. also, sooting it might be a problem too if you have to overexpose two stops over box speed like I have to do with fp4.

I'll say my process isnt hard to learn, nor is it the only way to reversal process black and white negs. If you want to try something from a kit first, freestyle sells kits which I think are for reversal processing Foma or Rollei black and white film. You might could try that and then move up to buying raw chems. If I had to do it all over again, I might go that route instead of finding a number of articles and making one single process out of the proccesses I've found.

Good luck with whatever you decide to do
 
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dafy

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Thanks Existing Light. ATP is EI 25 with SPUR (for *me* so far, only shot a couple of rolls), but they say 32 I believe. I used to shoot Tech Pan at EI 6 and the stain from PMK was awesome.

I have been scanning a lot lately, but am still learning. Scanning my BW negs yields good results, but being 35mm the only film I like so far is my old Tech Pan stuff. Scala, the few rolls I shot, are scanning beautifully. Even that old PolaChrome stuff scans nice, and the PolaBlue (or whatever it was called) scans nice but the grain is huge. I think my issue is grain more than anything, which I don't like usually, though of course some images look great that I shot with TMY and Delta 3200.

I might as well try the Freestyle kit the first time around, and go from there. I've no aversion to mixing chems but simplicity might do me well in the first attempts.

Thanks so kindly for helping me to move forward with this:smile:

Shawn
 
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Thanks Existing Light. ATP is EI 25 with SPUR (for *me* so far, only shot a couple of rolls), but they say 32 I believe. I used to shoot Tech Pan at EI 6 and the stain from PMK was awesome.

I have been scanning a lot lately, but am still learning. Scanning my BW negs yields good results, but being 35mm the only film I like so far is my old Tech Pan stuff. Scala, the few rolls I shot, are scanning beautifully. Even that old PolaChrome stuff scans nice, and the PolaBlue (or whatever it was called) scans nice but the grain is huge. I think my issue is grain more than anything, which I don't like usually, though of course some images look great that I shot with TMY and Delta 3200.

I might as well try the Freestyle kit the first time around, and go from there. I've no aversion to mixing chems but simplicity might do me well in the first attempts.

Thanks so kindly for helping me to move forward with this:smile:

Shawn

I dont you will find grain a problem with something faster like FP4 or Plus-X, but my taste in grain is a bit different than yours. To an extent, I like grain.

I do find the grain unnoticible at normal viewind distances from the screen. Scanning might give different results, though. I think the contrast of slower films would be a problem with my process unless you're shooting in flat lighting which could use a contrast boost





I like the simplicity of this process. Where did you learn of it? Also, would you post a picture please?


I mostly used the Ilford reversal processing PDF and this article ( http://www.angelfire.com/wi/spqrspqr/photo/bwreversal.html ). I also did a lot of scouring photography forums like this one and finding recipes and processes. Eventually I did a little experimenting and came up with my process. The process I use is mostly a conglomeration of the ilford pdf and the article I posted.

I dont have a scanner, so I cant post a scan, but next time I project one of the slides, I'll take a pic of it with my camera that uses the technology that allows me to post on the web :D
 
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Yeah, the kits are expensive. That's the mein reason I skipped using them and went straight for the raw chems. At least with the kits, though, you dont have a stock pile of raw chems if you decide you dont like the process. I'm just now finishing up with the 1 pound bottles of sodium bisulfate and sodium metabisulfite. I still have quite a bit of a 100 gram bottle of potassium permanganate :smile:


Oh, I think I should mention that if you have glycerin in your house, you should probably keep it away from the potassium permanganate. They dont like each other and will cause a fire. Good think I dont use glycerin for anything :D
 

frobozz

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I've got some Kodak Precision Line Film LPD4 that supposedly produces a positive image through standard development! I haven't had a chance to play with it yet, but that could be interesting. Its purpose was for masking and for title slides and things (high contrast) and it's orthochromatic so taking normal still pictures with it would be strange at best.

Duncan
 

nickrapak

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edit 2: what about my old favourite, PMK Pyro, any thoughts on that for this process?

I don't think that staining developers would work well with the film, as there could be stain from the negative image that wouldn't be fully bleached, and there is not much silver left in the final image.


Another suggestion (that I haven't tried yet) is to use a 20g/l sodium sulfide solution as the redeveloper. This removes the need for the light reversal step, and produces sepia-toned images.
 
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dafy

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I emailed Freestyle, and saw they have the Kodak kit, too. Nick, I never thought about the adverse affects of the stain. I do seem to recall Photographer's Formulary way back when had a replacement for technidol, maybe that's the way to go. Let's see what Freestyle says, maybe the recommended SPUR will work...or for that matter EL's original suggestion of Dektol:smile:
 

Mike Wilde

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From notes I harvested off an old newsgroup (remember them) quite a few years ago:

REVERSAL DEVELOPMENT OF TMAX FILM

This is the formula used for reversal of TMax 100 and Tmax 400 film. It
works well for both 35mm and 120 films. From the Mar/Apr 1988
issue of Darkroom & Creative Camera Techniques.

1: FIRST DEVELOPER
Water at 125 deg. 750 cc
Metol 2 grams
Sodium Sulfite, Anhydrous 100 grams
Hydroquinone 5 grams
Sodium Carbonate, Monohydrate 60 grams
Sodium Thiosulfate, Pentahydrate 16 grams
Potassium Bromide 4 grams
Cold water to make 1 liter
Develop 10 min @ 68deg - Constant gentle agitation.
Use once and discard.
NOTE: If you do not wish to mix this, you may use Kodak D76 or Ilford ID11+
Adding: 15 grams Sodium Carbonate
4 grams Sodium Thiosulfate
1 gram Potassium Bromide
Per 250ml for each roll

2: WASH 2 Minutes - Running water.

3: BLEACH
Potassium Dichromate 9.5 grams
Sulphuric Acid 12 cc
Agitate 3 minutes. After 3 minutes the light may be turned on and the
remainder of the process can be done in white light.

4: WASH IN RUNNING WATER 3 MINUTES.

5: CLEARING BATH
Water 1000 cc
Sodium Sulfite, Desiccated 50 grams
Agitate for 1 minute.

6: RINSE IN WATER 2 MINUTES

7: REEXPOSURE TO LIGHT.
Expose film to white light of a Photoflood bulb in a
reflector at 5 feet for 2 minutes. Film may remain on the reel.
Rotate reel to insure complete coverage of film by light.
Do not use sunlight.

8: REDEVELOPMENT, Second Developer
Dektol 1:2 for 3 minutes

9: WASH 3 MINUTES.

10: FIX 5 minutes in regular hardening fixer.

11: HYPO CLEAR, WASH and DRY as usual.

NOTES: The time for First Development should be thought of as a starting
point. The First Development is the most critical part, so try to keep all
the variables, time and temprature, as constant as possible. Expose and
develop a test roll or two of film to arrive at a time and exposure index that
is suitable for your system. Overexposure will result in thin slides lacking
in density, and underexposure will do the opposite. TMax 100 and TMax 400
can be rated at about its full speed but will have to be customized for your
conditions.

In order to obtain Sepia toned slides, instead of the Dektol, the Second
Developer may be composed of 2 grams per liter of SODIUM SULFIDE. (Not
Sulfite.)
 

michaelbsc

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8: REDEVELOPMENT, Second Developer Dektol 1:2 for 3 minutes



Both the OP an this recipe use Dektol. What is so special about Dektol? At the second develop stage shouldn't any developer capable of reducing Silver Halides work?
 

Mike Wilde

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Want high strength high contrast developer to build the d-max needed, which I uunderstand is higher than normal for a negative when you project a positive. I anm not aware of any reduction with Dektol; the bromide here is a modest restrianer, and Dektol D72 published formula it is rather low in sulfite.
 
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dafy

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Sounds like ATP 1.1 will not be ideal for this, I can't imagine getting any mids with Dektol (I'll certainly experiment though). Is PanF a normal-developer emulsion? I've never tried it...
 

michaelbsc

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Want high strength high contrast developer to build the d-max needed ...

Maybe it's for the time requirement. Don't really know much about it, but I would expect this development step goes to completion, so that one could simply develop longer to get the dmax. Maybe not. I could easily misunderstand something here.

Of course, if regular old developer is going to take 30 minutes vs 3 minutes for Dektol, then I can see it.
 

holmburgers

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I've wondered the same thing. I believe that it is faster, but indeed, couldn't any developer work?

I read that the purpose of the first developer is to develop the negative image to "gamma infinity". What exactly does this mean? Doesn't one have to worry about fogging in the 1st dev?
 

fschifano

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Wow, thanks so much, very informative:smile:

>>13) Mount, project, and enjoy

I'm completely new at this (reversal processing), I don't plan on projecting, but scanning for print output. My experience with slides (minimal - some Velvia, Astia, Provia and that awesome and awesomely fragile stuff from Polaroid, the blue instant process at home stuff...neat stuff...and some Scala of course) has recently led me to see that they are quite often less grainy, have a better tonality, etc. than many of my negatives. Not always, but enough for me to want to try ATP 1.1 (which is a lot like TechPan) as a positive because of it's grain-free (sic) nature.

Do you think it's worth the effort/learning curve here? Or is this normally only done for projecting?

Shawn


I don't think there is any real advantage to going through the whole reversal processing routine if your objective is to scan the negatives.
 

frdrx

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I passionately adore Fomapan R100 -- the contrast curve, the sharpness., the grain, the atmosphere it creates.
 
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