titrisol
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It is. Caffenol is a relatively expensive developer and I wonder if an LCA would support the eco-friendliness often attributed to it.
Eco friendly? It was never the point
It is. Caffenol is a relatively expensive developer and I wonder if an LCA would support the eco-friendliness often attributed to it.
the controls are not very predictable
It is. Caffenol is a relatively expensive developer and I wonder if an LCA would support the eco-friendliness often attributed to it.
So the order to mix things is also important, not just the amounts of each?
I often see the coffee and the soda mixed together, then the vitamin C added to this, is this correct or should we really be splitting the water into thirds, dissolving each, then mix coffee with soda, then with vitamin C? Or a different order altogether?
One liter of caffenol is around €1.50 if I shop around in regular consumer channels. If I do the same for, let's say, pyrocat 1+1+100, it's around €0.15. That's 1/10 the cost. Store-bought Adonal/Rodinal is around €0.30 for 1l at 1+100.At 17 € per 1Kg is not very expensive...
So the order to mix things is also important, not just the amounts of each?
I often see the coffee and the soda mixed together, then the vitamin C added to this, is this correct or should we really be splitting the water into thirds, dissolving each, then mix coffee with soda, then with vitamin C? Or a different order altogether?
One liter of caffenol is around €1.50 if I shop around in regular consumer channels. If I do the same for, let's say, pyrocat 1+1+100, it's around €0.15. That's 1/10 the cost. Store-bought Adonal/Rodinal is around €0.30 for 1l at 1+100.
I'm not so much talking about financial cost, but the bulk of stuff that goes into it. This comes at a cost, too. The material needs to be synthesized from feedstocks, purified, packaged, transported etc.
What's the point of caffenol, really? It's not particularly cheap. It's most likely not particularly environmentally friendly when compared to functionally similar alternatives. It stinks to high heaven and has a tendency to stain the emulsion (but not an image-wise stain that might be desirable). It's slow. It's unpredictable/non-standardized unless you ensure that you get the exact same coffee and the manufacturer doesn't change something about that product. It takes up more shelf space than alternatives. It needs to be mixed at time of use from dry ingredients and it's not possible to make some kind of concentrate that can be stored. And it has no image properties that are particularly unique or desirable.
Really the only thing I can see it has going for it is that there's a novelty/fun factor to it, and technically speaking, it gets the job done. Evidently, it's not my cup of coffee; I see why people would try it once or twice for the "hey, neat"-experience. But it's beyond me why people would stick with it. What's the point in using a product that's not particularly good at its job, is relatively expensive and comes with a couple of downsides in practical use?
I still believe that the vast majority of caffenol users are in it for the fun factor and probably the satisfaction of the McGyver-like approach.
One liter of caffenol is around €1.50
It needs to be mixed at time of use from dry ingredients and it's not possible to make some kind of concentrate that can be stored. And it has no image properties that are particularly unique or desirable.
and comes with a couple of downsides in practical use?
but the smell may be too much
The soda is of course not a factor. It's something like 2.5% of the cost.I have bought 4 Kg of soda back in 2019, I still have 2 Kg.
Not anymore around here at least. Coffee prices have risen sharply over the past few years or so. Supermarket prices are now at around €25/kg for the most generic instant coffee. I looked up ascorbate prices around here; they're about €20/kg. This is what you'd pay as a consumer for reasonable quantities; surely, you could drop costs further by buying bulk, but I think that's kind of antithetic to the nature of a 'supermarket developer'.The instant coffee costs 5 € per 400 gr.
I find it inconvenient. Mind you, I'm used to it as it's what I do with ECN2 color developer and instant mytol B&W developer. This means I'm also acutely aware of how nice & easy it is to just dose some pyrocat etc.Is that really a problem to mix ingredients when you need it ?
Mentioned earlier; read back, still valid.What downsides ?
It's a great project in that context; the notion that you can produce photos by throwing stuff from the supermarket together is magic! Have fun! And you're right about the inkjet ink (and paper) being more of a cost driver than the developer. Then there's the film to account for as well.Gearing up for working with the grandkids
I'll start by saying that I do have the short Caffenol book, but I have questions before I start gathering all the chemicals.
Coffee - check
Vitamin C - check
De-ionized water - check
What about stopbath, fixer, and wetting agent? There are a bunch of different suggestions, but what works well and hopefully comes in a long shelf life version for storage.
Also, can the developer be reused or is it really best to be one time only?
One of the writers in the caffenol book makes a gallon batch using his own coffee beans, puts a spec of conventional developer in it and then reuses his caffenol developer.
The mixing order is not critical. Don't worry about it.
One reason I use caffenol is because it's cheap; like $0.01 per sheet of paper. I develop anything in it ranging from film, paper to even cross-processed color film and I'm experimenting with reversal processing with it, too. I reuse the developer for up to a year, then mix a new batch and season it. I do not use instant coffee, but instead buy raw beans, roast them and use them; this gives me control over what beans I use. I prefer pure c. robusta.
I think I've heard the same person who relayed the info to me do the same thing. IDK when, how often, under what conditions etc.@ezphotolessons mentionned that another developer was added to the mix ?
Most people recommend cheap instant coffee.
Robusta preferred over arabica.
There are similar formulas with red wine, beer
There were many good discussions between Pat Gainer and PhotoEngineer on the subject of Kbr vs Table Salt here in Photrio many years ago
Also there were a few artciles about it in unlblinking eye, and magazines in the early 2000s.
Depending on the country, Iodized salt contains 30-50 mg/kg of Iodine (per WHO)
In the US 45 mg/kg of Iodine is the norm, whcih seems to be the Lidl brand you found
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