I have often wondered if E-6 Reversal Bath will chemically fog a piece of b/w film, instead of pulling it out in the light. I have also wondered if plain-ol' pot. ferricyanide bleach would do the job of the Ilford bleach recipe.
You can't use a colour bleach as that will also remove the remaining un-processed silver halide as that you need to re-expose chemically or with light & develop to form the positive.
Ian
The bleach doesn't remove silver halide, it converts metallic silver into bromide, (ie: the developed silver from the first bath), then second developer, develops the exposed silver (which is everything, bar what was developed in the first hence reversal).
Our local photographic shop has a Tetenal kit for doing this. It's amongst a bunch of sale items and is going quite cheap. Does anyone have any experience of these kits?
Steve.
How do I take negative BW film and develop it as a positive BW slide?
Ian Grant said:That's exactly what you don't want, the bleach needs to convert the silver into soluble silver salt that washes out of the image, If you convert the silver back to a bromide or chloride it will get re-exposed and re-develop with the positive.
Ok, a slightly different thing now-
Can you please look over this and tell me where I go wrong?
I'm going to reverse process Plus-X negative film in 16mm
First dev: HC-110 for 5 minutes
Stop bath for 3 minutes
Bleach in normal room light until it looks good (Farmer's reducer?)
Hold about 10 cm under a 60 watt incandescent light and re-expose on each side for about 30 seconds
Re-develop in normal room light with HC-110 until it looks proper
(I eventually want to try using Caffenol for the second developer)
Fix 5 min
A few problems I notice, with my limited knowledge of photo chemistry:
1. You want to bleach before re exposing, not while re exposing.
2. Mr. Grant has pointed out that ferricyanide bleach will not work for this, as it does not remove the bleached silver of its own accord like the permanganate bleach listed in the Ilford recipe, but instead "marks" it for removal by fixer. If it is not removed before you re expose and re develop, the process will not work.
3. Farmer's reducer is ferricyanide bleach mixed with the main ingredient in fixer. If you use Farmer's Reducer as your bleach, it would make sense that you will also remove silver that you intend to re expose.
4. How are you going to handle the remjet layer?
Finally, what are you aiming to achieve? Saving about 18 cents per foot in processing costs ($18 per $100 feet)? If this is all, consider the volume you will be shooting and the time, chemical costs, and such that you will spend on this to determine if it is really worth while. If this is just a fun experiment, have at it, but if you intend to save a whole bunch of money, I would not count on it.
Remjet? Is that like anti-Halation dye? If so, doesn't that wash out with the first developer?
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