One shot is not quite economical
In this instance, it is economical, since 1 litre of the stock solution gives you 4 litres of working - and the chemicals that make up 1 litre are in very small quantities. But I don't consider this developer a good choice for most film (especially for hp5).
Why, HP5 comes up too grainy from FX-37? ID68/Microphen looks quite nice on HP5
The stock of ID68 has more sulfite and less borax - no carbonate - than FX37. That probably accounts for nice-looking hp5 negatives. HP5 looks like gravel in FX-37 - less so if you underexpose it (the "speed boost"). I've developed a lot of HP5 in FX37 because it cut through the fog that had developed in that particular bulk roll -- and I kind-of liked the looks (sometimes). But Xtol (Mytol if you make it) makes for better negatives.
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I was amused by the quotes included early in this thread which describe FX-37 as a "fine grain" developer. Anyone who has done a comparison by developing two pieces of film (of the same shot) in FX-37 and almost any other developer will realize there's nothing "fine grain" about it. I've used FX-37 many times, hoping I'd learn to like the results, but I have always found the resulting negatives to have an unpleasant harshness to their tonality, and though sharper than film developed in any solvent developer, grain was conspicuously more pronounced.
I found FX-37 to be suitable only for large format negatives, and even then, the degradation of the tonality of the image was notable. It may be fine for some who like grain and hard/harsh results, but it wasn't for me.
Thanks for sharing your results @retina_restoration . I am looking for a fine-grain developer actually. Maybe Mytol will be a better option.
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