Gabriel Aszalos
Member
I need some help regaining my sanity, because I feel I'm going insane. I've introduced too many variables into my exploration.
Over the past year I've shot mostly DD-X and HP5 @ 800. This year, I decided to experiment more and start shooting also at 1600, at the same time considering Tri-X and TMax 400, as well as experimenting with developers (I currently have Ilfotec HC, Microphen and Rodinal).
My goal is to find a look and feel which works for me and go for that consistently. However, this is a painful process which will take me a loooooot of time to explore because I shoot around one film per week. That means one test per week. By the time I get to try all dilutions, stand vs. non-stand, all developers, all films, both at 800 and 1600, including the failures which will need correction, I will go insane and have lost a lot of potentially valuable memories (not to speak of the inconsistent look over time).
My goal with photography is to photograph my family, friends and everyday life in a documentary like fashion. That's why I chose to push to 800 or 1600 so I can shoot in both low light (indoors) and day light (outside). I need to stop this madness and just stick to one.
I was very inspired by the work of Ralph Gibson (I know, not documentary photography) who I know uses Rodinal, and some other people I admire. In my limited trials (including stand), I really liked it. I loved the sharpness, and I love the grain (when not too excessive - I found HP5@1600 in stand to be perfectly acceptable to me both in terms of grain and shadow detail). Microphen was also fantastic @1600. With Ilfotec HC I'm still experimenting and the last roll of HP5@800 I shot with 1+31 at 9.5 minutes as per Ilford's instructions came out over developed. I'll need to correct for this next time.
My question is: is it possible to obtain (more or less) the same result with all of these developers by varying agitation technique, dilution and time? I realise Microphen is what it is, with little room for variety, and it's a great one, but I'm talking about HC and Rodinal.
Can Rodinal be successfully used for pushing with enough time and low agitation? Can it bring back shadow details like Microphen does through compensation in for example stand development? Can HC be better with enough practice? I'm going insane here with too many variable which I need to reduce. I really like the sharpness of Rodinal (ADOX), but I'm getting mixed messages about it's usability. Official documents say (https://www.adox.de/Photo/keeping-properties-of-developers/, as well as http://www.mironchuk.com/hc-110.html) that Rodinal goes bad quickly. And yes I know about the myths of Rodinal lasting decades. HC on the other hand keeps very well but I've not been getting very good results in my limited trials.
I'm hoping someone can knock me back to my senses because browsing around forums reveals so many different opinions that one has no idea what the actual truth is without trying it out on their own. To re-iterate my goal:
Thanks for reading. I hope all this rambling is at least a little bit coherent.
Over the past year I've shot mostly DD-X and HP5 @ 800. This year, I decided to experiment more and start shooting also at 1600, at the same time considering Tri-X and TMax 400, as well as experimenting with developers (I currently have Ilfotec HC, Microphen and Rodinal).
My goal is to find a look and feel which works for me and go for that consistently. However, this is a painful process which will take me a loooooot of time to explore because I shoot around one film per week. That means one test per week. By the time I get to try all dilutions, stand vs. non-stand, all developers, all films, both at 800 and 1600, including the failures which will need correction, I will go insane and have lost a lot of potentially valuable memories (not to speak of the inconsistent look over time).
My goal with photography is to photograph my family, friends and everyday life in a documentary like fashion. That's why I chose to push to 800 or 1600 so I can shoot in both low light (indoors) and day light (outside). I need to stop this madness and just stick to one.
I was very inspired by the work of Ralph Gibson (I know, not documentary photography) who I know uses Rodinal, and some other people I admire. In my limited trials (including stand), I really liked it. I loved the sharpness, and I love the grain (when not too excessive - I found HP5@1600 in stand to be perfectly acceptable to me both in terms of grain and shadow detail). Microphen was also fantastic @1600. With Ilfotec HC I'm still experimenting and the last roll of HP5@800 I shot with 1+31 at 9.5 minutes as per Ilford's instructions came out over developed. I'll need to correct for this next time.
My question is: is it possible to obtain (more or less) the same result with all of these developers by varying agitation technique, dilution and time? I realise Microphen is what it is, with little room for variety, and it's a great one, but I'm talking about HC and Rodinal.
Can Rodinal be successfully used for pushing with enough time and low agitation? Can it bring back shadow details like Microphen does through compensation in for example stand development? Can HC be better with enough practice? I'm going insane here with too many variable which I need to reduce. I really like the sharpness of Rodinal (ADOX), but I'm getting mixed messages about it's usability. Official documents say (https://www.adox.de/Photo/keeping-properties-of-developers/, as well as http://www.mironchuk.com/hc-110.html) that Rodinal goes bad quickly. And yes I know about the myths of Rodinal lasting decades. HC on the other hand keeps very well but I've not been getting very good results in my limited trials.
I'm hoping someone can knock me back to my senses because browsing around forums reveals so many different opinions that one has no idea what the actual truth is without trying it out on their own. To re-iterate my goal:
- I need to decide between Tri-X, HP5 and TMax-400 to see which one is best pushed at 800 and 1600 in terms of shadow detail, contrast, sharpness, tonality. This is a 100% subjective matter so I don't expect someone else to tell me the answer.
- I need to find a developer which works with the film above and find a technique with that developer which I can stick to reliably, consistently, and on the long term. Without the fear of missing out on something that would be better.
- Given that I do documentary-style photography, the developer will likely have to apply more or less generally for what I do, and not some specific use case (e.g. landscape)
- I have to chose between Ilfotec HC, Rodinal or Microphen (XTOL also could be an option).
Thanks for reading. I hope all this rambling is at least a little bit coherent.
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