albada
Subscriber
Here's another one of my ideas which must have been tried many times over the decades, but I've read nothing about it.
The goal is to achieve both high film-speed (more shadow detail) and very fine grain by developing a roll in two different developers, A and B:
The theory behind this idea is that the large amount of solvent in a super fine grain developer destroys many small latent image specks (reducing speed), so we first make those specks bigger in bath A before subjecting them to the solvent in bath B. The result is hopefully both good speed and very fine grain. Is anyone aware of work on such a pair of developers?
All two-bath developers I'm aware of contain an alkali in bath B to activate the developer that soaked into the emulsion in bath A. The idea above is entirely different. But will it work?
Mark
The goal is to achieve both high film-speed (more shadow detail) and very fine grain by developing a roll in two different developers, A and B:
Bath A: A speed-maximizing developer. Develop in this bath long enough to get a thin negative.
Bath B: A very fine grain developer. Develop to normal contrast.
The theory behind this idea is that the large amount of solvent in a super fine grain developer destroys many small latent image specks (reducing speed), so we first make those specks bigger in bath A before subjecting them to the solvent in bath B. The result is hopefully both good speed and very fine grain. Is anyone aware of work on such a pair of developers?
All two-bath developers I'm aware of contain an alkali in bath B to activate the developer that soaked into the emulsion in bath A. The idea above is entirely different. But will it work?
Mark