Hi all. I'm posting here to confirm whether Kodak D76, a water stop bath and plain sodium thiosulfate would suffice, to develop 35mm and 120 ilford hp5+, and paper too, with another fixer bath.
thank you.
thank you.
Welcome to APUG.Hi all. I'm posting here to confirm whether Kodak D76, a water stop bath and plain sodium thiosulfate would suffice, to develop 35mm and 120 ilford hp5+, and paper too, with another fixer bath.
thank you.
you can use plain water instead of stop bath for both film and prints ( RC and FIBER )
i have for years ( 29 ) with no bad effects. plain hypo will be fine,
but it will take longer to fix your prints than "speed" fixer. i have never used
d76 for film or prints so i don' t know if it will be active enough of a developer
to be used with your prints, probably not, but it will be OK for your film.
if you have to only use 1 developer ( for your film and prints ) you might consider dektol
you can dilute it 1:6 and develop your film in it for about 6 mins, and you can dilute it 1:1 or 1:2 and
use it to develop your prints. dektol should be readily available if you are able to find d76.
i am not sure if you are interesting in "experimenting" but you might also consider a developer
made of instant coffee, sodium carbonate ( you can heat up sodium bicarbonate (bakingsoda) to get moisture out and make
sodium carbonate ) and vitamin c. it will develop both your film and prints. if you have d76, or dektol
you can add a little bit in, to speed up the process, add a little more contrast &c. i have been using coffee
developer this way for more than 10 years ... i started by putting a little ansco 130 in it ( similar to dektol )
and now i do this same thing with dektol. i have also been developing my film in either ansco 130 (mostly) or dektol( for maybe 3 years) since the late 1990s/2000.
good luck !
john
ps the developers i mentioned work well with 35mm, 120 and sheet film. you might have to
adjust your agitation with 35mm, or if it (dektol) gives too much contrast dilute it a little more.
While Dektol can be used for both Prints and film (using different dilutions), you likely will get better resuls using D76 for film. To the OP, I would suggest sticking to D76 for film if you find it available, where you are.
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