- Joined
- Nov 29, 2008
- Messages
- 86
- Format
- 35mm RF
Just goes to show you, Patrick, that even among experienced darkroom hands there are differences of opinion and an ebb and flow of techniques. B&W film developing is really quite resilient. The links Ned pointed you to will explain pretty much everything you need to know.
After years of more or less conventional practice, I've of late simplified my own process by moving to liquid developers (Rodinal, HC-110) and fixer (Ilford Rapid Fix); changed from Kodak Photo Flo to LFN Wetting Agent (eliminates need to make a working solution, as the couple drops of LFN are dispensed straight from the bottle); and dispensed with stop bath and hypo clear altogether. Everything is used one-shot. Easy peasy.
Welcome to the forum.
After years of more or less conventional practice, I've of late simplified my own process by moving to liquid developers (Rodinal, HC-110) and fixer (Ilford Rapid Fix); changed from Kodak Photo Flo to LFN Wetting Agent (eliminates need to make a working solution, as the couple drops of LFN are dispensed straight from the bottle); and dispensed with stop bath and hypo clear altogether. Everything is used one-shot. Easy peasy.
Welcome to the forum.


