Thomas, I've loved watching your threads and thoughtful contributions on here for the last couple of years. I'm a young fellow who recently has finally gotten rid of the 'magic bullet' bug and these types of posts are very inspirational. I settled three years ago on Pyrocat-HD to really see what it could do and frankly, it performs just like it should and so do my films. That leaves the image making up to me. That is the most important concept to take away.
Thanks for being a good role model for young guns like myself,
Kyle
Kyle,
Thanks very much for those kind words *blush*, and I'm so happy to hear it when young folks pick up photography with film!

It wasn't long ago that I myself decided that film and darkroom based photography was going to be my thing, as I am only sort of middle-aged at age 42. In the first five years I made many mistakes, including switching around with different films and developers, simply because I didn't know any better. I have often witnessed the act of handing a camera to someone completely inexperienced with photography, and been blown away by the results. My step son, at age 13, took my Minox 35GT on a road trip and came back with something like 20 pictures from the Black Hills, and they were all exquisite photographs, full of life and imagination. I have one of them hanging on my wall today.
So I kick myself for being so ill advised and focusing so much on the technical aspect of photography, when I really had the urge to create. I thought I was being creative, but I should have been learning about lighting, I should have been learning more about composition, and practicing working with people... But I think that perhaps it takes a while to find our bearings, what we want to do with our photography, and maybe mucking around with films and developers is something that needs to happen in order to fully understand that there is no gold nugget there. I don't know.
That lesson was hard to learn and took a long time for me, but luckily I feel like I'm over it, and I just want to make photographs. But I also want other people to learn from my mistakes, at least those who are into photography for the sake of producing work that we are really really proud of, and where we realize that nobody but us care about what film developer we used. It matters to find something that works for us, and it has to be a consistently good and versatile combination of materials, but once that's accomplished, there are much bigger things to worry about - the art of expression, to carry forward to potential viewers an idea or a concept that we are passionate about. No film stock or film developer is going to make that happen, only what's inside our heads and how we use it.
Thanks again, and I hope you continue working with a medium that you love, and continue making photographs that you are proud of.
- Thomas