Kodak Ektonol was a favorite of mine to use for warm-toned printing for years. After Kodak stopped making it I stocked up with a full case but soon after I switched to mixing my own from established formulas. Last year I needed to do a quick printing session and was short/low on a few standard chems from Photographers Formulary, and I spied the case of Ektonol in my darkroom, and mixed up a gallon. It worked just as I remembered; a standard warm-toned developer with good capacity and keeping qualities, and the finished fiber prints were quite lovely. I mixed one more gallon size and have used that up, and now I would like to reverse engineer this formula but have not found a formula that is close enough as a starting point. I do have a few more packets to use as a control, and I have a good idea of the components they are pretty standard based on the package: Sodium Sulfite, Metol, Hydroquinone, Sodium Tetraborate (as per the package info), Potassium Bromide and here's the kicker, Sodium Hydroxide separately packed in Part B. Part A package states total weight as 227g, no weight given for Part B but a quick weigh with packaging is 31.5g ( I will be weighing the packaging of both A and B after I mix up this next batch to see what the weight of the chemicals is.)
SO, how can I go about devising either the formula or a close approximate? Anyone know of a warm-toned paper developer that used Sodium Hydroxide and no carbonate with lots of Potassium Bromide that I can use as a starting point?
I'd be willing to part with one of my treasured 1 gallon package to someone who wants to help figure this out, many thanks in advance.
SO, how can I go about devising either the formula or a close approximate? Anyone know of a warm-toned paper developer that used Sodium Hydroxide and no carbonate with lots of Potassium Bromide that I can use as a starting point?
I'd be willing to part with one of my treasured 1 gallon package to someone who wants to help figure this out, many thanks in advance.


