Hi all,
Ive been experimenting with different developers for black and white reversal. Ive tried developers from Kodak, Ilford and Tetenal, and also mixing my own from powder. Ive been trying with different films to see what kind of results Id get.
One of the best results I got was with Ilford PQ and Tmax400 (a bit grainy). Ive been trying to get similar results using D19 (with Tmax400) but its not quite as good.
With PQ it was not necessary to use a silver solvent. With D19 first developer times are getting pretty long without thiocyanate, with thiocyanate (2g/L) I really dont like the midtones.
So, as far as I can understand, this means that PQ contains something D19 does not… One of the things that differs in PQ compared to D19, is that PQ uses Potassium carbonate and Sodium or Potassium Hydroxide instead of Sodium Carbonate (https://www.photrio.com/forum/threa...s-ilford-pq-universal-paper-developers.63236/)
Ive also come to understand that caustic developers are handy for reversal (https://www.photrio.com/forum/threads/reversal-processing-with-d-11.128367/), meaning it should contain Sodium Hydroxide in the formula.
So I guess my question is something like this…
- Is it likely that adding potassium or sodium hydroxide to the D19 would result in a developer that would provide similar results as with PQ?
- If so, does it matter if its potassium or sodium hydroxide? I already got sodium hydroxide.
- Also, how much would be needed? And what other parts of the formula would have to be adjusted (ie switch from sodium carbonate to potassium carbonate, maybe this is necessary if one uses potassium hydroxide instead… or not)?
Cheers
Peter
Ive been experimenting with different developers for black and white reversal. Ive tried developers from Kodak, Ilford and Tetenal, and also mixing my own from powder. Ive been trying with different films to see what kind of results Id get.
One of the best results I got was with Ilford PQ and Tmax400 (a bit grainy). Ive been trying to get similar results using D19 (with Tmax400) but its not quite as good.
With PQ it was not necessary to use a silver solvent. With D19 first developer times are getting pretty long without thiocyanate, with thiocyanate (2g/L) I really dont like the midtones.
So, as far as I can understand, this means that PQ contains something D19 does not… One of the things that differs in PQ compared to D19, is that PQ uses Potassium carbonate and Sodium or Potassium Hydroxide instead of Sodium Carbonate (https://www.photrio.com/forum/threa...s-ilford-pq-universal-paper-developers.63236/)
Ive also come to understand that caustic developers are handy for reversal (https://www.photrio.com/forum/threads/reversal-processing-with-d-11.128367/), meaning it should contain Sodium Hydroxide in the formula.
So I guess my question is something like this…
- Is it likely that adding potassium or sodium hydroxide to the D19 would result in a developer that would provide similar results as with PQ?
- If so, does it matter if its potassium or sodium hydroxide? I already got sodium hydroxide.
- Also, how much would be needed? And what other parts of the formula would have to be adjusted (ie switch from sodium carbonate to potassium carbonate, maybe this is necessary if one uses potassium hydroxide instead… or not)?
Cheers
Peter