- Joined
- Dec 21, 2014
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I recently purchased some liquid concentrate Ethol LPD and have been using it to develop FB Cooltone (glossy), FB Classic Multigrade (glossy), and FB Classic Multigrade (matte) as well as RC Portoflio (pearl). I had been having excellent results with Ethol LPD (powder mix) at 1:3 dilution paired with RC Portfolio as well as FB Matte and Glossy in the past. But, for some reason, this liquid concentrate version of LPD while still working exactly the same for the RC Portolio, now has drastically different development times - and they are VERY long development times. After testing, I'm inclined to think the liquid version (apparently twice as strong as the powder mix) is not what's causing issues with spotty development and chronic underdevelopment with the Ilford FB papers. I am flummoxed.
In one session, I tried all of the FB Ilford papers I mention above, plus the RC Portolio, with Ethol LPD at 1:4 dilution (68-70 degrees) using the same negative. Whereas a 3-4 minute development with the RC Portfolio produces a rich image, the FB papers take no less than 10 - 25 minutes. Yes, it takes that long for it to fully develop, or come close. For 3/4 of the development time, the print looks like a very dull, flat image. (FYI, I'm using a moderately dense negative with a #3 filter). It's not the enlarger time because I experimented with drastically longer times doubling, even tripling the time plus opening up a stop on the enlarger. When I did overexpose the image, the faded development would make its slow progress as before but you could tell the image was overdeveloped. Overdeveloping made no impact on the very slow trudge of development and that flat, low contrast result. Sometimes spots would appear on the image. I think that might be because of the amount of time it is spending in the developer.
Is there something particular about these Ilford FB papers that doesn't react well with Ethol LPD? I thought it might be the LPD developer, but when my Ilford RC Portfolio prints were coming out as expected, I had to wonder if there was something particular about the FB papers (versus RC). Of the three FB papers I tried, the FB Cooltone glossy performed the worst, the Classic matte finish was a little better, and the Classic glossy came somewhat close to the RC Portfolio, but with an unexpectedly long development time of roughly 13 minutes. The blacks were a tad flat and everything was generally duller, though it was much better than the absolute flat junk that resulted with the matte and the cool tone papers.
What's most frustrating is that using the same settings, the RC Portfolio paper comes out great and all FB papers come out underdeveloped or slightly flat and underdeveloped (even after as much as 25 minutes of development). The development sometimes produces spots on the paper. Very curious.
Your help is much appreciated!
In one session, I tried all of the FB Ilford papers I mention above, plus the RC Portolio, with Ethol LPD at 1:4 dilution (68-70 degrees) using the same negative. Whereas a 3-4 minute development with the RC Portfolio produces a rich image, the FB papers take no less than 10 - 25 minutes. Yes, it takes that long for it to fully develop, or come close. For 3/4 of the development time, the print looks like a very dull, flat image. (FYI, I'm using a moderately dense negative with a #3 filter). It's not the enlarger time because I experimented with drastically longer times doubling, even tripling the time plus opening up a stop on the enlarger. When I did overexpose the image, the faded development would make its slow progress as before but you could tell the image was overdeveloped. Overdeveloping made no impact on the very slow trudge of development and that flat, low contrast result. Sometimes spots would appear on the image. I think that might be because of the amount of time it is spending in the developer.
Is there something particular about these Ilford FB papers that doesn't react well with Ethol LPD? I thought it might be the LPD developer, but when my Ilford RC Portfolio prints were coming out as expected, I had to wonder if there was something particular about the FB papers (versus RC). Of the three FB papers I tried, the FB Cooltone glossy performed the worst, the Classic matte finish was a little better, and the Classic glossy came somewhat close to the RC Portfolio, but with an unexpectedly long development time of roughly 13 minutes. The blacks were a tad flat and everything was generally duller, though it was much better than the absolute flat junk that resulted with the matte and the cool tone papers.
What's most frustrating is that using the same settings, the RC Portfolio paper comes out great and all FB papers come out underdeveloped or slightly flat and underdeveloped (even after as much as 25 minutes of development). The development sometimes produces spots on the paper. Very curious.
Your help is much appreciated!
