Andrew, another useful video for Pyrocat HD users I was quite amazed at how much extra exposure rendered a difficult to print negative a very acceptable to print negative What was also clear to someone like me who has no experience of staining developers was how much extra stain is produced by lower dilution
In the few moments it took to watch it I note that the likes has jumped threefold
As an animal lover can I add a word of caution. If you leave open those massive 14x17 bellows for a few moments then for goodness sake check that a mother cat and her kittens have not made a home in the bellows before collapsing them![]()
pentaxuser
Very interesting once again, Andrew!
One thing you made me wonder about is the amount of b+f on the various dilutions. I understand why you quickly eliminated the 1+1+200 dilution from the test, but the light table shot did suggest it had by far the lowest fog level.
I've been particularly interested in the b+f issue lately due to my carbon printing experiments, and I'm currently at a point where I make pretty low-contrast tissues, requiring high-contrast negatives. This tends to exacerbate b+f issues as well. As you know, it's just additional density to print through, and carbon (especially with DAS sensitizer) is kinda slow to begin with.
What are your impressions b+f-wise?
It's not fun standing there, spinning that tube for that length of time![]()
HP5 is notorious for rapid increase of B+F
Yeah, I know; that's mostly why I've been experimenting with dilutions like 1+1+25, or simply using print developer (ID62)...
Uhuh; I did a few similar sheets like yours - pretty long-expired HP5+ in Pyrocat. Negatives were kind of nice, but so much base density to print through...I guess I'll have to stick to really fresh film for this kind of thing!
@Ian Grant hah, that's nice - I did not know that ID62 was actually (also) intended as a film developer. I use it for paper mostly, but sometimes also for film, in similar dilutions at around 1+4. Yes, it's fast that way - which is the point for me. It's also quite grainy when used like that, but that's not a problem when contact printing. I never tried more sensible dilutions for film like the 1+19 you mentioned.
I use Pyrocat-HDC, which is pretty much the same as Pyrocat-HD and find 1:1:100 works just fine for me. I've played with other dilutions and while they serve different purposes I always seem to fall back to 1:1:100. One method I haven't really tried is using it as a 2-bath developer. For me, Pyrocatcat-HDC is the perfect staining developer just as I think Xtol-R is the perfect non-staining developer. That's just me of course. I only mix my Pyrocat-HDC in glycol. Andy, I have nothing better to do with my time so longer developing times don't really matter. Of course at 73, with an enlarged prostrate, I might end up doing a little dancing towards the end of those long developing sessions.![]()
I have my doubts about the Pyrocatechin. Its color was too dark
I'm just concerned about the sediment that formed in the concentrate.
Take care John! By the way, I'll be uploading a video about 2-bath Pyrocat-HD on the weekend.
Hello,
I recently mixed Pyrocat-HD with Glycol, but I have my doubts about the Pyrocatechin. Its color was too dark - I guess it oxidized over time. The first test looked good, but I have a slight sediment at the bottom - is this normal?
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