My wife is working early and needing a ride, so I found myself with a spare hour or two in the morning before I start working from home. I also had a bottle of DF-96 that i'm not really interested in using anymore, so I decided to try using it as a one-step paper dev/fix.
I had a pretty dark photo from an Ansco Panda toy camera to start with, I did f16 for 20 seconds on some expired Ilford Multigrade 4 RC.
According to what I've read both on here and on the Cinestill website, fixing speed is increased by agitation and developing speed is increased by either temperature or pH. I didn't adjust the temperature at all, so it was done at ~20C. I slipped it into the bath and let it sit until it looked developed(ish), then I started some light agitation for a few minutes until I saw no more change happening. Then rinsed with water.
You can ignore the big mark in the bottom, I didn't dry the paper properly as I ran out of clips. The top portion of the image is covered in a fine grit. I'm thinking this was the residual sludge that was in my DF96. It honestly looks a lot nicer digitally than it does in real life. The image looks very washed out. I don't know if that's due to an underexposure or because the monobath fixed the image too quickly.
Is it archival? I doubt it. Does it work? Kinda, is it worth it? No, I don't think so.
I had a pretty dark photo from an Ansco Panda toy camera to start with, I did f16 for 20 seconds on some expired Ilford Multigrade 4 RC.
According to what I've read both on here and on the Cinestill website, fixing speed is increased by agitation and developing speed is increased by either temperature or pH. I didn't adjust the temperature at all, so it was done at ~20C. I slipped it into the bath and let it sit until it looked developed(ish), then I started some light agitation for a few minutes until I saw no more change happening. Then rinsed with water.

You can ignore the big mark in the bottom, I didn't dry the paper properly as I ran out of clips. The top portion of the image is covered in a fine grit. I'm thinking this was the residual sludge that was in my DF96. It honestly looks a lot nicer digitally than it does in real life. The image looks very washed out. I don't know if that's due to an underexposure or because the monobath fixed the image too quickly.
Is it archival? I doubt it. Does it work? Kinda, is it worth it? No, I don't think so.