Cor
Member
Chlorhydroquinone is a less well know, perhaps old fashioned developing agent (and a relative of hydroquinone). It primary use is a in warmtone developer such as Defender D-58: I quote from a post made by Randy, another very interesting thread from him on (there was a url link here which no longer exists)
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Here is the formula from the Photo-Lab-Index 1949 version
Defender 58-D
Water 750ml
Sodium Sulfite 16.0grams
Chlor-hydroquinone 4.0grams
Sodium Carbonate 16.0Grams
Potassium Bromide 0.6grams
Water to make 1Liter
Develop for at least 4 minutes. With more exposure and less time in the developer tones will be browner but some deepness in the shadows will be sacrificed.
Chlor-hydroquinone stays active even down into the 50s°F range. Much lower then Hydroquinone.
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As seen in the link: C-HQ has the ability to develop fairly heavily fogged B&W paper fog free with clear whites. I had some fogged Kentmere Kentona I tried it: works like quite nice, but I have a few questions for those who are perhaps familiar with this developer:
I used a 4 min developing time at 20degC and obtain a nice warm tone image on the Kentmere paper (with a hint of pink/salmon), perhaps a bit weak in de max density. Is this to be expected ?
I diluted the D-58 1:1 with water per the recipe I found also elsewhere, but maybe I should not dilute ?
The next day I wanted to print a few images more, to find out that the developer has almost lost all it's strength. The developer is not keeping well once mixed ?
What colour does the solid chloro-hydroquinone have ? Mine is tan coloured (bought in 2002) and the resulting mixed developer is light brown coloured.
Best,
Cor
........................................................................................
Here is the formula from the Photo-Lab-Index 1949 version
Defender 58-D
Water 750ml
Sodium Sulfite 16.0grams
Chlor-hydroquinone 4.0grams
Sodium Carbonate 16.0Grams
Potassium Bromide 0.6grams
Water to make 1Liter
Develop for at least 4 minutes. With more exposure and less time in the developer tones will be browner but some deepness in the shadows will be sacrificed.
Chlor-hydroquinone stays active even down into the 50s°F range. Much lower then Hydroquinone.
...........................................................
As seen in the link: C-HQ has the ability to develop fairly heavily fogged B&W paper fog free with clear whites. I had some fogged Kentmere Kentona I tried it: works like quite nice, but I have a few questions for those who are perhaps familiar with this developer:
I used a 4 min developing time at 20degC and obtain a nice warm tone image on the Kentmere paper (with a hint of pink/salmon), perhaps a bit weak in de max density. Is this to be expected ?
I diluted the D-58 1:1 with water per the recipe I found also elsewhere, but maybe I should not dilute ?
The next day I wanted to print a few images more, to find out that the developer has almost lost all it's strength. The developer is not keeping well once mixed ?
What colour does the solid chloro-hydroquinone have ? Mine is tan coloured (bought in 2002) and the resulting mixed developer is light brown coloured.
Best,
Cor