Hi guys
I'm new to B&W film, using DSLRs mostly. I haven't shot B&W film since my early teens in the 60s... till now. I've acquired some film 35mm SLR bodies to use with my existing lenses that I use on my DSLR plus a 6x7 MF system (currently being CLA'd)
I want to do all my own processing and I developed my first roll of 35mm HP5+ 2 weeks ago under the kind and watchful eye of my mentor, who lives 2+ hours drive away... He only shoots B&W both 35mm and MF 6x6. He loves grain and uses Rodinal as his developer. 2 weeks ago I knew nothing about developers.
Since I've been back home with my 24 negatives I've been researching on the net re suitable films and developers. It would seem that there are as many film/developer combinations as there are people. It would also seem that the Rodinal/HP5+ combination is not considered a perfect match...
So rather than following my mentor's choice of chemicals I've decided I need to establish my own. At this stage I'm limiting myself to Ilford HP5+ and FP4+, initially at their rated speeds of 400 and 125, but I DO want to push-pull these later.
As far as developer is concerned I would much rather stick to one for both films - for use at their rated speed but also able to handle say FP4 at 80 and HP5 say at 800 or 1600.
Initially I'm looking for good detail, sharpness and low grain - I realise that all these qualities may not be possible together. (I may well be looking to actually get grain later on.)
I'm after a long lasting liquid concentrate, especially after opening - it would appear Rodinal is good here, but because of the HP5/Rodinal issue I've been looking at Ilford LC29 as an alternative. I would probably develop one film per month at this stage, hence the need for a long lasting developer.
My question is: Would LC29 serve well as a long lasting developer for both FP4 and HP5 as well as allowing push-pull processing as I've described? And secondly, is the HP5+/Rodinal combination as bad as people say?
Cheers, Bob
I'm new to B&W film, using DSLRs mostly. I haven't shot B&W film since my early teens in the 60s... till now. I've acquired some film 35mm SLR bodies to use with my existing lenses that I use on my DSLR plus a 6x7 MF system (currently being CLA'd)
I want to do all my own processing and I developed my first roll of 35mm HP5+ 2 weeks ago under the kind and watchful eye of my mentor, who lives 2+ hours drive away... He only shoots B&W both 35mm and MF 6x6. He loves grain and uses Rodinal as his developer. 2 weeks ago I knew nothing about developers.
Since I've been back home with my 24 negatives I've been researching on the net re suitable films and developers. It would seem that there are as many film/developer combinations as there are people. It would also seem that the Rodinal/HP5+ combination is not considered a perfect match...
So rather than following my mentor's choice of chemicals I've decided I need to establish my own. At this stage I'm limiting myself to Ilford HP5+ and FP4+, initially at their rated speeds of 400 and 125, but I DO want to push-pull these later.
As far as developer is concerned I would much rather stick to one for both films - for use at their rated speed but also able to handle say FP4 at 80 and HP5 say at 800 or 1600.
Initially I'm looking for good detail, sharpness and low grain - I realise that all these qualities may not be possible together. (I may well be looking to actually get grain later on.)
I'm after a long lasting liquid concentrate, especially after opening - it would appear Rodinal is good here, but because of the HP5/Rodinal issue I've been looking at Ilford LC29 as an alternative. I would probably develop one film per month at this stage, hence the need for a long lasting developer.
My question is: Would LC29 serve well as a long lasting developer for both FP4 and HP5 as well as allowing push-pull processing as I've described? And secondly, is the HP5+/Rodinal combination as bad as people say?
Cheers, Bob

