Tmax 400@400 in Parodinal, 1:50, 20.C, 10 minutes
Times in rodinal must be the same
Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk HD
Ok, good to know. Well, I still want the new formula haha. But I want a LOT of formulas like all of the E6 ones... I want to make my own... I digress...
You can get double xx in your country?
You might have had to pay through the nose for that film, but by the looks of those shots you are certainly getting you dollars worth. If you have a fairly contrasty scene shot with Fuji Acros try stand developing it in you soup for 1 hr. I took a shot of a black steam locomotive with a Rollei and Acros and developed it in Rodinal 1:100 for one hour and was amazed. No grain and sharp as a tack.
As for the Chinese film? I have tried some ERA film in 4X5 and it really was good stuff, but can't get it anymore.
Some day I'll try stand developing with paRodinal. Thanks for the tip.
Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk HD
IRodinal stand develop 1:100 for one hour seems to develop just about everything, including C-41 film with really beautiful tones, it's like the answer to everything
However most of my B&W work I use it 1:50...
Stop complaining about film prices in USA. Here in Brazil we pay 15 dollars for Tri-x 120 and 10 dollars for Acros. We dont have Rodinal or any other developer except d76, which costs 25 dollars a gallon pack.
The cheapest way to buy film here is getting from eBay from USA, paying 50% more as import taxes.
BTW, all chinese films sucks. I only use TMAX 400 and Acros 100 in 120 and Tri-x, double x and acros in 35mm.
I think Stone said something about tmax and dd-x, Now I'm souping Tmax in parodinal getting good results.
Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk HD
Another convert to the Church of Rodinal! Glory!
So you're saying just pour it in at 1/100 agitate for 30 seconds and go watch a re-run of Route 66, come back, and any 120 film will be done?
And what about that god-awful Rodinal grain?
Thank you. I'd have rather not followed the link to see for myself. (but I did) Too much information; I'm on information overload here. I'm craving credibility. I'm a procedural thinker and do-er more in the form of PE the EK man. I'm a guy who read and followed published Kodak instructions as fastidiously as the Kodak guy with the clipboard in the Kodak paper sample swatch books when I was a teenager in the 70's. And it always seemed to work when my equipment was dependable. But it sure would be nice now that those days are gone to just be lazy and expect a good picture from any jiunk film I get my hands on these days. In other words, I might actually buy another bottle after 40 years and give it a go. I'm just too old to waste my time and money burning gas to go out on a picture expedition and end up with some crazy experiment that makes nightmares at the enlarger. Thanks again.
Well, as the thread was about 120, I figured 120 is the format in question; I personally wouldn't recommend Rodinal stand for 35mm... but that's because I don't shoot 35mm. When it comes to 120, I'm fine with Rodinal stand with any B&W film I use. Granted, the highest speed i'll usually shoot is TriX 400.
Here's a TriX 320 shot freshly dev'd in Rodinal semi-stand (1:100, 1hr)
View attachment 66110
And its 100% crop
View attachment 66111
This is a straight-up scan with my V700 @ 2400dpi, no noise/grain reduction etc., and no PP.
Thank you, both you gentlemen. You've made up my mind, as it was in 1974--stay away from the Rodinal. "A lot more grain", says StoneNYC. I was rather well afraid based on my experience 40 years ago that the little bottle of over-potent salt-and-pepper would turn my 120 Plus-X into 35mm Royal-X, and it sounds like it would. I'm afrain it's back to bread-and-water D-76 for me, now that Microdol is gone. Thank you for clarifying. I'm not sure of how to be a subscriber, but for me if it involves money, my daily life is already making me old before my time on that.
Not to mean to beat this thread to death, but there's still a disconnect I'm not getting here. According to StoneNYC, Rodinal at 1/100 gives more grain than the standard recommended dilutions (which are unacceptable). Now, Microdol straight is said to be a grainy mess pf a developer, yet 1/3 is the nectar of the gods on grain, sharpness, tonal range, film speed... So why does Rodinal go grainy when superdiluted and Microdol goes finer? All this brings me to my point in question. How would D-76 do as the hour-long forget-about-it method? I'm only guessing, not knowing the Rodinal formula, but I speculate it's probably something akin to D-76. So what would D-76 do as this lazy trick for all films, if you diluted it a bunch too?
Thanks. I had to google "pixel-peeping". I have no access to the photos on APUG, aside from those that appear as attachments. You've clarified--your experience is apparently much more concentrated to salvage color films as b&w than I initially gathered. So you've pretty well shut me up on the matter. I've just never been jumping for joy on D-76. I know Kodak called it a "general-purpose fine grain developer". And it was the standard stuff in any darkroom I ever was in. Like ketchup as the standard condiment on every table. I'm not a D-76 fan, but I can tolerate it, since that's about all Kodak has any more. Rather bland though. Bread-and-water for the prisoners.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?