John:
Okay... if you REALLY want to know the scoop... here it is:
Gosh.... can't say "how much". Mostly I develop a LOT. Haven't since we packed up and moved last year 'cause we had to pack up 25 years of stuff, move out, remodel, and only got into the house in August... settled and we're just getting back to daily normal life now. And then there's the day job. But generally, I tend to keep a 5 Liter tank of B&W developer close to full and a set of unmixed as well as mixed C41 in the fridge. Not there yet in the new place, but getting there soon. Have only traded for the LF camera during the move process and disposition of my stuff. It was there. I picked it up. Haven't shot a lick yet or even loaded my first film holder. But just before we bought the new home, we went to France, I shot 33 rolls of MF Portra 400 and developed them in a mad rush. Haven't printed, but did most of the post.
So that's where I am. I've been shooting 35mm in the meantime and some digital (like tonight where we had a Christmas light parade on the local sail boats). But I'm eager to do some creative stuff again.
I bought some HDPE Neoprene bottles (US Plastics) to increase the keeping qualities of my chemicals and this has worked, but I also kind of gave up on replenishment using a Jobo (except C41 where I do re-use as directed). Omer Hecht at Catlabs told me a Jobo was just going to aerate the heck out of my XTOL and replenishment wasn't likely going to work. At least not at the rate Kodak recommends. I did read someone here who has, but he's using about double the Kodak recommended replenisher quantity... which makes sense.FWIW Bergger's Berspeed is actually made by Moersch and I think it is very close to one of the Acufine developer (not Diafine) in terms of its high accutance, high speed and fine grain characteristics. I had used a lot of Perceptol, but then decided I wanted to settle on using Delta 400 at box speed and so moved to XTOL-R and after a fail or two, moved on to ID-11 because of the literature of one Jobo user in particular helped me get my process down. ID-11 is pretty standard. Tried Berspeed on recommendation from CatLabs, and was VERY impressed. Spur-HDX is something that has some appeal, too, and I've checked with the company and they sent me their data on use with a Jobo...but then I've been eager to give Caffenol a shot because of Steve Shaub's notes and recommendations based on his own work. Spur HDX is a bit expensive I think, and I haven't used it, but it looks worthwhile. Also, the Berspeed ain't the most fish friendly and neither is the Accufine.
FWIW, I don't use a whole 5L of B&W chemistry in 2 or 3 months, but I'll get quite far into it. I like to max out my Jobo's 2500 tanks and that means 600 ML with 4 MF films on 2 reels. So as a film shooter, I don't have a lot of deactivation issues. And I will just throw it out to be on the safe side. I think there are lots of folks who've decided it's just more reliable to use one-shot. The attraction of XTOL-R isn't the cost savings but the supposed "better" tonality and sharpness. Well.... I'm not sure that's not subjective or not something you can't deal with to some extent in post production. But I believe the folks who find it works from them are right... for the way they use it or they wouldn't bother. I didn't have the patience at that time to try to solve all teh issues, and once I tried Berspeed, didn't feel it necessary.
So Caffenol. I've been doing the research and like I said, found a LF guy - "Bo" who's using mostly CH-rs and CL versions, and doing nice work. I don't think my efforts will prove a diversion, but if I fail...they surely could be. But that's not the intent. Never is in fact. But at some point you sometimes do make decisions. And there are costs of continuing versus redirecting, and each of us may choose differently at different times.
I've just gotten close to the point where I can almost begin to fire up the Jobo again. I've ordered the Potassium Bromide, I've got the Ascorbic Acid and the Instant Coffee, and the Sodium Carbonate.. and some other chems. Seemed worth avoiding the commercial products and the unknown byproducts if you can, and then purify the process as much as possible. I am OCD enough to want to be fairly precise for whatever that's worth!!!! (which may not be much). I've even dug out the 500 gram electric scale I bought some years ago but haven't used. Yes, I had to clean the contacts with a file and some contact cleaner, but it's working fine. I even have a PH meter for whatever that's going to do. The high tech lab gear(LOL) costs maybe $10 for the scale and another $10 for the PH meter. IF I fail, it won't be lack of wanting to do it right. I've even willing to go back to manual inversions, to give semi-stand a shot (CL) and see if it can deliver. I want to do some side-by-side and yes, I'll even do some testing to see whether there's any fine tuning needed on times and exposre, etc.
But I"m foolishly confident this can work and work well. I understand many think it's a dead end, and at times, Frankly, I wonder that myself. But if it DOES work and can be reasonably reliable, why not save the fishes? Actually here, it's more like the blue crabs... and oysters... and they're all of 100 yards away. Naval Academy is only a 5 minute walk from here. And this is a great place to take pictures.... very target rich all the time....and I'll be doing a lot of color I know. But I do love B&W... it's my first love from my childhood. Actually found some shots I had enlarged of my folks when we went to Canada, Hallifax and the Bay of Fundy. They were young... so yes, I've been at this a long time. But I've never done wet darkroom stuff.... 'casue this boy was going to be a film maker... and developed double super 8 film at home (super 16 back then), split it and all. It was cool, but life went in a different direction, and it kicked around and ultimately became a hobby....and recently (10 years ago) admitted that stills might just be a place a fellow could get creative... even in a digital age where it can seem antiseptic. And up until then, stills to me weren't more than candids and travel so much. So I suppose like many, digital led me back to film... so I could rediscover B&W 'cause "...a Leica Monochrome was too expensive". And that's a joke now 'cause I think in the end, after you collect and shoot all sorts of stuff, the Monochrome would have simply run all those $'s into one camera and one system... and probably ended up cheaper. Ah.... but that's my story. Maybe off-beat and even full of a lot dead ends, but maybe that's my thing? Our careers have direction and trajectory even.... which means with a hobby we have a bit more of the luxury to play at things....'cause we want to, and can afford to have the patience with processes no professional would put up with if he didn't have to. But sometimes.... you do. And for every time I think someone's crazy or there's something I say on first blush..."I'm never doing that...." maybe it's the kid in me that ends up... heck, that's exactly what I'm doing.
And I've had a lot more fun this way. And I keep learning. And I do want to be responsible. I dispose my fixer at the County Hazmat dump. I'd like to use safe chemistry. Don't have to, likely. But doing my part.... if the results work... it's what I should try to do. Does keep the wife happy.... and that's a good thing. And so here we are. I've got some stuff going on.... Christmas party, Christmas... grand daughter's birth.... all the usual stuff. But we're going to shoehorn this thing in there somehow. I have to hang a curtain across my film changing room (basement bath), and I have to hang my film hangers in the handy new enclosed $10 6-foot tall shoe rack I'm using to dry film dust free in the new place....( I don't have a basement shower anymore).... so there are small things. But as soon as my better half turns me loose.... it's going to happen. Days, maybe two or three weeks. Tops.
Let you know when I get something.
Best to you John and all of this group for the holidays ahead... whichever ones we celebrate...whether separate from each other or not... fact is, we're all in this thing together I think, and that's fine. Make yours a good one!
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