River Mantis
Member
I've seen a statement that in a reversal process the first development goes "to completion". And the paper development goes "to completion" too. First of all what does it mean? My naive understanding is that completion is a point in time when all potentially developable grains are developed (not counting the fogging process). If this is true then the final density of the given emulsion developed to completion is defined by exposure only (and the fog level) and the developer contrast characteristic stops playing any role as it affects the dynamics only (the balance between positive and negative feedbacks).
I'm actually trying to understand what characterise a reversal developer. Haist in vol.2 doesn't use the term "completion" in this context. He describes reversal developers once as "vigorous" and once as "vigorous and contrast". Does it mean that developer must be contrast-working to actually bring more contrast to the image or just do drive the process to completion as fast as possible (and let the emulsion show it's natural full contrast)?
I'm actually trying to understand what characterise a reversal developer. Haist in vol.2 doesn't use the term "completion" in this context. He describes reversal developers once as "vigorous" and once as "vigorous and contrast". Does it mean that developer must be contrast-working to actually bring more contrast to the image or just do drive the process to completion as fast as possible (and let the emulsion show it's natural full contrast)?