clogz
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My Rodinal..right or wrong!
clogz said:My Rodinal..right or wrong!
and it's the best soup I've ever had in me whole life and it always understands me. RIGHT !!!!!!clogz said:My Rodinal..right or wrong!
clogz said:Now Jorge, is it true ..about this Mexican Rodinal with a worm at the bottom of the bottle that eats away any excess grain?
There's nothing like beautiful vintage grain to show that life is worth living. I hope your going to top that jug up with some of that Glennmorangie before the worm drinks anyJorge said:Some of us preffer to take the worm out ......
we like the damn grain the way it is, 30 year articles not withstanding.
TPPhotog said:There's nothing like beautiful grain to show that life is worth living. I hope your going to top that jug up with some of that Glennmorangie before the worm drinks any![]()
TPPhotog said:There's nothing like beautiful vintage grain to show that life is worth living. I hope your going to top that jug up with some of that Glennmorangie before the worm drinks any![]()
Strange I'm a 35mm user and they didn't ask me but there again I was only errrm 8(ish) when that data was valid. As I said it's not a "magic bullet" but from mine and many others perspective it's a beautiful developer and now I use it for everything from iso 25 to 3200 and love it.hansbeckert said:The point of posting this article was to show how the different films and developers stack up in comparisons. Rodinal is not horrible, but it comes in pretty close to dead last on a number of scores relevant to 35mm users...
hansbeckert said:The product is not 'best in class'.
hansbeckert said:The point of posting this article was to show how the different films and developers stack up in comparisons. Rodinal is not horrible, but it comes in pretty close to dead last on a number of scores relevant to 35mm users...
roteague said:Sure it is; to the people who like it and use it. That is all that matters. You might as well ask which is better, Nikon or Cannon, Kodak or Fuji, or even Ford or Chevy. It's subjective.
MikeK said:Actually I have found Rodinal quite a remarkable developer for practicing the zone system, and depending on dilution enables both contraction and expansion simply through changing the dilution and development time. What is more I find this works admirably with 35 mm film.
- Mike
stephen said:I enjoyed the article. Reading data on films I remember was good fun. But the developers as well as the films are proprietary products, and as far as I can see, there is no reason why they should be the same today any more than the films they were tested on.
D76 may appear to be an exception, but when I started in photography D76 and ID11 had exactly the same published formula. The latest ones I have seen are similar, but not identical. Anchell and Troop's book says that commercial formulae have indeed changed over time.
The reason I quoted the part I did was because it specifically mentioned scores relevant to 35mm users. Criteria change with format size, as Hans has implicitly stated here. I have not developed a B&W 35mm film in years.
Rodinal has certain objective features that I set against the more subjective ones:
1 You can always make up your own from formulae if Agfa stops making it. This may not be the case with Acutol (although Geoffrey Crawley sportingly made the formula for Acutol-S public when Paterson discontinued it).
2. You can vary the dilution to vary the effect in a way that seems to me difficult to match with any other developer.
Final point. I did try Acutol back in the 1960s and found the prints I made amazingly sharp (Pan F in 35mm). I did not continue using it on a regular basis because the "look" of the negatives did not suit my own subjective preferences. Possibly others would look at my negatives (and/or prints) and think that they would have been improved by using Acutol. But I am the one doing the developing, so I get to make the choice.
hansbeckert said:Well, not really. In the class of developers to which Rodinal belongs (non-solvent), it comes up pretty much dead last, ...
....It's just that Acutol blows Rodinal away. If you think Rodinal is good (and you may well) then you'll go nuts over Acutol.
Ed Sukach said:It might be an idea to give this a rest. You *assume* that if no one here prefers Acutol, it NECESSARILY means they have not tried it ... a VERY LARGE assumption.
I prefer Rodinal. That does NOT mean that I do not wish to learn, or that I simply refuse to learn, nor do I deliberately blind myself from some undeniable truth.
I have as much RIGHT to prefer Rodinal as anyone else has to prefer anything else...
We are not trying to silence you. We ARE reading what you write, but its very repetition is becoming tiresome. We understand what you are saying - repeating it over and over again will not add to its credibility.
Vive' Rodinal - the elixer of the GODS!!
hansbeckert said:Of course you do. It's just that I hear so many people talking about Rodinal lately, and I have to point out that it's really not that great...that's all. Things go in cycles. Products are rediscovered every few years.
Jorge said:Please see:
(there was a url link here which no longer exists)
and
(there was a url link here which no longer exists)
The developer is only as good as the person using it. If you dont think is not that good, that is your opinion, just dont try to force your opinion on us. You probably just did not know how to use Rodinal. That is much more likely than saying is not good in face of evidence to the contrary.
as you were told before, give it a rest......
You are on bubba, will you then shut up, this is a very nice forum and we dont need the likes of know it alls like you. One print comming up.....hansbeckert said:This is 4x5! Of course, the developer does not matter so much with large format. In 35mm, it matters a great deal more. If you would run some tests on 35mm Tri-X, for instance, you'd be more open to discussion...
Jorge said:You are on bubba, will you then shut up, this is a very nice forum and we dont need the likes of know it alls like you. One print comming up.....
hansbeckert said:If you are interested in maximizing the quality of your negatives, you'll want the very last bit of detail and speed.
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