luisrq
Member
- Joined
- Jun 5, 2010
- Messages
- 14
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- 35mm
Thank you very much for this great information, I'm really wondering experiment this formula, but after the hot Spanish Summer
Thank you very much for this great information, I'm really wondering experiment this formula, but after the hot Spanish Summer
Hi Richard, I'm happy to meet you here. Let me know please if hyou have already experimented this formula 777? It looks very interesting, but despite other informations I've read, this one don'y contain Glycin.., I 've read that Glycin gives very nmice tones, specially in the highlights.I communicated with KennyE a few times and referenced him in this forum when the subject of 777 came up. Photrio forumers seem to be skeptics of his work, and no one, possibly with himself, has tried the formulas extensively.
Thank you, I've never did it, but I can experiment....the best way to figure out development times is by developing by inspection .. you have to use a green safe light.
I communicated with KennyE a few times and referenced him in this forum when the subject of 777 came up. Photrio forumers seem to be skeptics of his work, and no one, possibly with himself, has tried the formulas extensively.
the other way to do it is roll your own rolls of film ( bulk loader ) and roll a few short rolls, bracket expose your shotsThank you, I've never did it, but I can experiment....
Thank you! But in my opinion a + or - 30% would represent more than 1 Stop, I think is too much... To increase or reduce development time for about 1 stop I usualy apply +/- 15%. I would appreciate your opinion, thanks again.the other way to do it is roll your own rolls of film ( bulk loader ) and roll a few short rolls, bracket expose your shots
and develop each roll at a different time .. the first one at like 8 minutes look at the results, the second one at 30% less the 3rd one 30% more and make up your own times .. the whole act of making photographs is a science experiment anyways, and
in the end most developers are pretty much the same so you are not really reinventing the wheel if you know what i mean.
Thank you! But in my opinion a + or - 30% would represent more than 1 Stop, I think is too much... To increase or reduce development time for about 1 stop I usualy apply +/- 15%. I would appreciate your opinion, thanks again.
I think that has been the story for past 10 years, well maybe not 10 years, but for a very long time. If you like 777 you might want to give MCM 100 a try.
Although I would not describe it as compensating, rather semi compensating, not as soft working, grain is sharper, very tight, full speed, (I shoot most ISO films at 80 and 400 at 320) with full range of tones. What is in p-phenylenediamine. I think it's very close to Edwal 20. So your right, MCM 100 not a straight up replacement for 777. Test print, scanned 8X10, work print no burning or dodging.
I find it odd how these talks about the 777 go 'round and 'round like a merry-go-round, if I may be so blunt. Having tried a number of developers from the 1930s era on modern films (not all of them, mind you), I got convinced that the 777 is a p-aminophenol developer with p-phenilendiamine, not unlike Edwal 20 (Gradol is a salt of PAP, BTW), but with a higher pH and thus faster working. So, how about we start a worldwide poll/crowdtesting, if there are enough users who a) had personal experience with the real 777, and b) are willing to try out the concoction that I think approximates the 777 rather well? Since in 2019 we do not need to be concerned with chemicals hardening the emulsion, it amounts to a few readily available components. And it is toxic, of course.
Gradol is a salt of PAP
This is the first reference I've seen that states what Gradol is. Do you have reference, and is this salt of PAP commercially available?
If the sum total effect of all these toxic chemicals is to keep the emulsion from melting-off of no longer available film stocks, then I will be happy to abandon this entire quest and just pursue other like-type developers.
Thanks for the clarification. I hesitate to ask, but just how would you supplement Rodinal with PPD? If the answer is too involved, don't bother, but I am curious.I probably did not make myself clear. There is no need for emulsion hardening components of the original 777, but the image character or "tonality", if you wish, can be obtained by supplementing Rodinal with PPD and lowering pH a bit. It can also be mixed from scratch. Unfortunately, the legendary keeping quality of 777 (and of MCM 100) is solely due to PPD. The mystique surrounding this developer , IMO, is more historically interesting, than it is of much practical use.
I probably did not make myself clear. There is no need for emulsion hardening components of the original 777, but the image character or "tonality", if you wish, can be obtained by supplementing Rodinal with PPD and lowering pH a bit. It can also be mixed from scratch. Unfortunately, the legendary keeping quality of 777 (and of MCM 100) is solely due to PPD. The mystique surrounding this developer , IMO, is more historically interesting, than it is of much practical use.
Given that you can effectively substitute p-aminophenol with metol, if you correct for the difference in reduction potential etc, and adding the ppd and reducing the pH reduces the grain, you effectively wind up with Microdol, D-25 etc which achieve the same goals without needing to deal with the potential nastiness of PPD.
Thanks for the clarification. I hesitate to ask, but just how would you supplement Rodinal with PPD? If the answer is too involved, don't bother, but I am curious.
I sense I am stepping into the deep end of a pool and should just swim back to the shore while I can...
Thank you.Dilute Rodinal as you usually do. You need a microwave to warm up a portion of your diluted Rodinal to about 50 degrees C, using about 1/10 portion of your developer in a pickle jar. Put on gloves and goggles. Dissolve PPD in that and combine with the rest. From this moment onward, also use gloves and goggles during development. This solution you made will keep a long time and can be re-used. If this sounds too involved, don't go there.
P.S. Sorry to be patronizing, but obviously not your kitchen microwave is used here
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