Talk to me about this paper developer...
I decided to try it with a neutral paper, and compare to dektol. So, I had a tray of dektol, and a tray of the LPD, and exposed two prints at a time, put one on the dektol, and one in the LPD. The difference between the two, it seemed to me, was very subtle, and quite hard to tell the prints apart. That said, I do think the dektol prints had slightly deeper blacks.
At my next session, I just had the LPD out, and I felt like I was having real trouble getting a good, deep black. In fact, I was printing an image that I was happy with, and was just making a couple of copies of it... when suddenly, the last copy was way too light. I suspect that the temperature of the developer just go too cold. (My darkroom gets very cold... especially in New England winters!) I warmed up the developer, and adjusted the exposure time, so I have the copies I needed.
Am I right in thinking that LPD should really be maintained at about 68-70 degrees F (around 20 degrees C)? I was using a 1:3 dilution, maybe I should have tried a different dilution? How do different dilutions affect the tone in neutral papers? As an aside, I quite liked it with warm tone papers as well, an did not find it hard to get rich blacks. It looks like a good all purpose paper developer to keep on hand, but any thoughts, opinions, and ideas on how best to use it with both neutral and warm tone papers would be appreciated.
TIA
I decided to try it with a neutral paper, and compare to dektol. So, I had a tray of dektol, and a tray of the LPD, and exposed two prints at a time, put one on the dektol, and one in the LPD. The difference between the two, it seemed to me, was very subtle, and quite hard to tell the prints apart. That said, I do think the dektol prints had slightly deeper blacks.
At my next session, I just had the LPD out, and I felt like I was having real trouble getting a good, deep black. In fact, I was printing an image that I was happy with, and was just making a couple of copies of it... when suddenly, the last copy was way too light. I suspect that the temperature of the developer just go too cold. (My darkroom gets very cold... especially in New England winters!) I warmed up the developer, and adjusted the exposure time, so I have the copies I needed.
Am I right in thinking that LPD should really be maintained at about 68-70 degrees F (around 20 degrees C)? I was using a 1:3 dilution, maybe I should have tried a different dilution? How do different dilutions affect the tone in neutral papers? As an aside, I quite liked it with warm tone papers as well, an did not find it hard to get rich blacks. It looks like a good all purpose paper developer to keep on hand, but any thoughts, opinions, and ideas on how best to use it with both neutral and warm tone papers would be appreciated.
TIA