Thomas, those are excellent examples. At what EI did you shoot both of those photos? I'm interested in trying some Edwal 10. Any idea where I can get some? I didn't see any at B&H or freestyle.
Well I am going to commit to using hp5 in 120 for a year, I hope for longer, but now all I need to do is decide on a developer. I am looking at liquid developers, the ones in running are rodinal, hc 110, Edwal fg7, and any others you might suggest.
I use to use acros 100 and rodinal for a very long time and I really liked the look. I am now moving up to a faster film that will be able to do anything with. Mainly shooting at 200 all the way to 3200.
So out of the liquid developers which one would you use to be the most versatile. I really like the look of rodinal for the sharpness and the grain in the higher dilutions but dont want to develop for 1-3 hours.
So here is the interesting conclusion:
1. You can add one more developer to your arsenal, and develop your film in it when you need a boost in contrast.
2. You can underexpose your film, and over-develop it while slowing down agitation for a highly similar result. D76 should work really great for this purpose, along with either HP5 or Tri-X.
Your choice. I prefer to use a single developer and just alter how I expose and develop the film, as it keeps it simpler in stocking chemistry. It may be a bit of a compromise. I really love Edwal 12, and can't quite get there with Xtol. For portraiture, I may just add Edwal 12 back into the mix. It is a rather extraordinary developer, especially for 35mm and diffusion enlarging.
But you can get really really far with just one film and one developer. Just today I received an email from a friend who had visited someone that has used the same developer for 70 years. Master craftsman who knows his tools.
- Thomas
That is awesome about the guy who used the same developer for 70 years. Wonder what it was? Rodinal? Was d76 around then?
Do you think that you could use edwal 12 could be used for everything.
Also I want number 2. Use the same developer but expose different for the look I want for certain picture. I have never been about having every detail in the shadows. The way that I see pictures in my head is contrasty B&W, with a smooth tones in-between. Dark shadows and light highlights.
One of my mentors recommended that I lock myself in a darkroom with a few hundred feet of Tri-X and lots of D76, - Thomas
The microphen is actually a sharper developer since it does not act as a solvent developer. It has more grain but also because if that appeares sharper.
Brian, I have a different experience regarding sharpness and Xtol; I actually find it to yield sharper prints than D76 (which is the same as ID-11). That is stock compared to stock.
1+1 they both gain sharpness, speed, and increase grain.
Replenished Xtol is even sharper than 1+1 but gives FINER grain. At the expense of 1/2 stop speed. This is how I use Xtol, mainly, but am using it 1+1 too to re-create a TXP type curve from TMax 100 and Acros exposed at 400 and then pushing it.
My observations are mainly from printing 35mm negatives to 9x12" size, equivalent to about 10x enlargement. I have gone to 16x (15x20), but only from Xtol negatives so no comparison there, and it holds up surprisingly well with TMax 400 and really well with TMax 100 or Acros.
Interesting Thomas. I used to be a huge Xtol user, back when they made that wonderful film in 120, oh what was it called.... ?? Oh yeah, Neopan 400...That was a match made in heaven. Now that Neopan is gone I've done a lot of work with ID-11 and find it a great developer. Xtol to me was a bit too fine grained. I like a little bit of bite. And ID-11 gives HP5 a nice bite. Both developers are great and can't go wrong either way.
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