Hey all,
So, I tried Potassium Bromide tonight to help bring back some highlight detail.
The concentration was 0.54 mg/L of developer and still it was too much.
The image was very low contrast. I even tried stopping down to make sure I wasn't over exposing but blacks were muddy or and not very dark and high light detail was worse.
Here is the current developer formula I'm using althought without the KBr.
Oh, and I'm using enlarging paper as my negative film as I hope to use
20x24" paper soon and I can't currently afford or justify waiting for the really expensive ilford once a year sale to buy actual film. Xray is out the question as I haven't found 20x24" sizes. I might try orthochromatic film as there is sizes up to aroudn 24x32" which my view camera can utilize. I might be using too much uracil but from my tests, it seems the original formula Alec posted was for xray negative film and paper negatives don't have enough easily accessible silver, thus you need more uracil.
43.6 mm of H2O
1.75g sodium carboxymethylcellulose (CMC)
2.8 NaOH)
5.22g uracil pyrimidine-2,4(1H,3H)-dione
2.2 g diethylhydroxylamine (DEHA)
1.2 g aminoethylethanolamine (AEEA)
0.1g metol ( 4-methylamino)phenol sulphate )
I'm currently using the silica and Palladium Chloride receiver formula but soon will try the most recent posted receiver that Alec shared that resists fading. If image quality is worse, I will stick with the formulas I'm currently using but add the steps of using an air brush gun to spray a light coat of acetic acid on the print, letting it dry, then covering the print with an archival acrylic spray can varnish.
I'm also going to be trying Analogwisdoms, developer formula! Thanks so much for sharing!
Report on the motorized laminating machine:
I used this one but with custom chrome plated tool steel rollers.
25In Semi Auto Cold Laminator Automatic/Manual Laminator Machine 110V(Item# 120072) : Amazon.ca: Office Products
www.amazon.ca
Rollers were custom made by an Alibaba merchant in China.
For two rollers and them shipping back the original roller, it cost 1150 USD including shipping (which was 400 dollars)
The quotes I got from local machine shops were about anywhere from 1000-2000 for each roller.
The business profile of the company that made the rollers for me (if you're getting the same machine I can connect with their sales people and maybe you don't have to send them an example roller)
It took a bit of sanding to get the rollers back in the disassembled machine.
And it two three of us to install the really heavy new rollers, but you could probably get away with two people doing it.
I haven't yet gotten a good looking image from the laminating machine, as I only tested it tonight with the KBr containing developer.
Tomorrow I will try with the regular developer.
But I compared two prints, one processed with the manual roller I know I can get decent images from, and one from the new automatic/motorized process, and the image made with the motorized processor looks better. Less weird artifacts that I believe are because the polyeurethane rollers are squishy, and less weird lines, due to in consistent manual rolling.
Good luck everyone with your experiments!
And thanks again Alec for all you have shared and will continue to share.