Les McLean said:Suzanne use the powdered version of LPD and have had no problems in getting rich blacks with it, perhaps the temperature is the problem. There is a table of dilutions and how they afrect the paper colour on the packaging on the tin, at least on the last batch that I brought home from the US. I'm in Ireland at present but when I return home on Friday I'll post that table here.
ann said:We have used this developer for many years ; the only time others are used is when I do a class that takes 15 different developers/and/or ratio and 5 to 10 papers and print one negative.
The higher dilution ratio warms up even neutral papers.
Aother developer that was interesting was Super Platnuim. at a 1:15 ratio Ilford's Cooltone paper ended up a light tan when ulsed with this developer.
donbga said:I've found that the P-72 variant of D-72 closely matches the qualities of LPD. I also choose this formula because of my alergic reaction to metol. Mixing the developer from scratch also saves a lot of money.
If anyone is interested I'll post the formula which I originally got from David Vestal's book on black and white printing.
Don Bryant
photomc said:Suzanne, would be interested in hearing your thoughts comparing LPD to PF-130. IIRC you have also used 130 recently and the blacks were not as strong. Thanks as always.
The formula that I'm posting was taken from a listing in one of David Vestal's darkroom books and may not be an exact replacement chemically for Ethol LPD. I adopted it many years ago as my primary silver gelatinenlarging paper developer when it became difficult for me to purchase LPD. It is Phenidone based like LPD which is a plus for me since I am acutely sensitive to Metol and I'm unable to use developers like Dektol. Here is the formula:To make 4 liters of stock solution use:3 L Distilled water 50C - 125F180 g Sodium Sulfite50 g Hydroquinone270 g Sodium Carbonate2 g Phenidone7.5 g Potassium Bromide1 g BenzotriazoleAdd water to make 4 liters.Starting with 3L of H2O mix the chemicals in the order listed dissolving each chemical fully before adding the next.You can make a solution of Phenidone in isopropyl alcohol to help dissolve the Phenidone easier and to make adding 2g to the solution more accurate. The stock solution of Phenidone in isopropyl will not last long so there is no need to mix a large volume.I usually dilute the stock solution 1:3 with water for a warmish tone print. 1:1 for a little cooler tone. The developer is very long lasting in the tray and the stock solution stays stable much longer than Dektol. For best storage use an amber glass bottle. I can print all day and come back the next morning and add a small amount of dilute stock and get extended life to the developer already in the tray. This formula is inexpensive to make once the initial investment in the constituent chemicals is made. Of course different papers will give different results in tone and contrast. My normal development time is 3 minutes at room temperature with all papers I use such as Ilford Multigrade IV, Agfa Multi-contrast Classic, Oriental Seagull, and Cachet to name a few.You can also vary the concentration of Benzotriazole and Potassium Bromide to vary color, contrast and fog reduction but I rarely do this.Don Bryant
I should mention that this formula is very close to ID-62
Phenidone | ID62 0.5 g | P72 0.5 g |
Sodium Sulphite (anh) | 50 g | 45 g |
Hydroquinone | 12 g | 12.5 g |
Sodium Carbonate (anh) | 60 g | 67.5 g |
Potassium Bromide | 2 g | 1.9 g |
Benzotriazole 1% soln | 20 ml | 25 ml |
Water to | 1 litre | 1 litre |
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