In late April I mixed a 1l batch of Photo Formulary 130, saving 0.5l (in an airtight amber bottle) and mixing 1l of working solution. The working solution was stored in a plastic photo chemical bottle, but it was not filled to the top. Life intervened for the last 6 weeks and I did not have time to print. After reviewing the archived articles on the long life of Ansco 130 working solutions, I was not terribly worried about losing the working solution of my new favorite paper developer.
I was planning a marathon printing session for tonight to scratch the printing itch I had been having while not having time to print. I was surprised when I poured the working solution into the tray. It was a deep chocolate brown. I did make a couple prints on Ilford satin RC paper, with developing times of 4-5 minutes (I did 3-4 min when fresh). The images seemed ok but the border has a brown tone to it. Although it was quite a bit harder to tell than when fresh since the developer was opaque, the initial image emergence time appeared to be in the 20 to 30 second time frame.
I assume the brown color is from the Metol and HQ oxidizing. I was somewhat surprised that images developed, let alone emerged as quickly as they did. Was that from the Glycine still being active?
Should I pitch the working solution or relegate it to being a bottle of "old brownie" for warm tone printing? I am concerned about the tone of the borders. Is this something that could happen from 5 minutes in deep brown developer? The paper safe I used is a cheap one that I question the ultimate light tightness of (and will likely replace soon) so I am not discounting the browning of the borders being from fogging of the paper.
Not that reading APUG and having a cold one is a bad evening, it just leaves the printing itch unscratched.
I was planning a marathon printing session for tonight to scratch the printing itch I had been having while not having time to print. I was surprised when I poured the working solution into the tray. It was a deep chocolate brown. I did make a couple prints on Ilford satin RC paper, with developing times of 4-5 minutes (I did 3-4 min when fresh). The images seemed ok but the border has a brown tone to it. Although it was quite a bit harder to tell than when fresh since the developer was opaque, the initial image emergence time appeared to be in the 20 to 30 second time frame.
I assume the brown color is from the Metol and HQ oxidizing. I was somewhat surprised that images developed, let alone emerged as quickly as they did. Was that from the Glycine still being active?
Should I pitch the working solution or relegate it to being a bottle of "old brownie" for warm tone printing? I am concerned about the tone of the borders. Is this something that could happen from 5 minutes in deep brown developer? The paper safe I used is a cheap one that I question the ultimate light tightness of (and will likely replace soon) so I am not discounting the browning of the borders being from fogging of the paper.
Not that reading APUG and having a cold one is a bad evening, it just leaves the printing itch unscratched.
