Ty Phillips
Member
Hi all! Newly registered to the APUG forums, although I have browsed them extensively in the past.
I have recently become enamored with stand development using R09 (1:100). The results (Neopan 400, APX 100) seem more or less the same as what I get with 1:50 using normal agitation, but I find stand developing much more convenient.
I also shoot a lot of 35mm HP5+ which I expose at box speed and normally soup in HC-110 dilution H. I am currently in the process of experimenting to see if I can stand develop this in dilute HC-110 in an attempt to replace the normal 10 minute regimen. Why HC-110 and not R09? Well, if you have to ask then you've apparently never seen the golf ball sized grain that HP5+ in Rodinal gives.
My first experiment was somewhat of a failure. I exposed the HP5+ at 400 and stand developed in HC-110 dilution G (1:125) for 45 minutes with 1 minute initial agitation. The negatives, most of which were shot in relatively high contrast daylight came out extremely contrasty with little shadow detail, dense highlights and almost no midtone range, which is usually where HP5+/HC-110 excels. :confused:
I realize HC-110 is a much different animal than Rodinal, which is a true compensating developer, but the results puzzled me. All scenes were carefully incident metered. If the contrast range of the scene was wide, I usually favored the shadows in determining the proper exposure.
If the film were overdeveloped, I would have expected more shadow detail. I was also surprised with the very high contrast. I would have thought a high dilution like G would have produced relatively low contrast negatives.
My understanding is that at high dilutions, HC-110 does have some compensating properties and I was hoping that 45 minutes at dilution G would allow the developer to work on the shadows after exhausting around the highlights. But maybe 45 minutes is not enough. Or perhaps the highlight density simply cannot be controlled well when shooting at box speed. I wonder if the results would have actually been better had I pushed 1-2 stops and increased development time.
I realize I am probably trying to do the impossible, but if anyone has any input I would love to hear your thoughts. My knowledge of photographic chemistry is about as advanced as my knowledge of women's handbags....
Thanks,
Ty
I have recently become enamored with stand development using R09 (1:100). The results (Neopan 400, APX 100) seem more or less the same as what I get with 1:50 using normal agitation, but I find stand developing much more convenient.
I also shoot a lot of 35mm HP5+ which I expose at box speed and normally soup in HC-110 dilution H. I am currently in the process of experimenting to see if I can stand develop this in dilute HC-110 in an attempt to replace the normal 10 minute regimen. Why HC-110 and not R09? Well, if you have to ask then you've apparently never seen the golf ball sized grain that HP5+ in Rodinal gives.
My first experiment was somewhat of a failure. I exposed the HP5+ at 400 and stand developed in HC-110 dilution G (1:125) for 45 minutes with 1 minute initial agitation. The negatives, most of which were shot in relatively high contrast daylight came out extremely contrasty with little shadow detail, dense highlights and almost no midtone range, which is usually where HP5+/HC-110 excels. :confused:
I realize HC-110 is a much different animal than Rodinal, which is a true compensating developer, but the results puzzled me. All scenes were carefully incident metered. If the contrast range of the scene was wide, I usually favored the shadows in determining the proper exposure.
If the film were overdeveloped, I would have expected more shadow detail. I was also surprised with the very high contrast. I would have thought a high dilution like G would have produced relatively low contrast negatives.
My understanding is that at high dilutions, HC-110 does have some compensating properties and I was hoping that 45 minutes at dilution G would allow the developer to work on the shadows after exhausting around the highlights. But maybe 45 minutes is not enough. Or perhaps the highlight density simply cannot be controlled well when shooting at box speed. I wonder if the results would have actually been better had I pushed 1-2 stops and increased development time.
I realize I am probably trying to do the impossible, but if anyone has any input I would love to hear your thoughts. My knowledge of photographic chemistry is about as advanced as my knowledge of women's handbags....
Thanks,
Ty