grainyvision
Subscriber
This is really great, and I will try to get this Polyethylene Glycol 3350 compound.
About this part B: it contains lots of Potassium Carbonate, and I wondered, whether you need that much to obtain strong buffering, or just to raise pH. If you just want to raise pH, then you might want to consider Trisodium Phosphate, which reaches higher pH than carbonates, but is more mundane than hydroxides.
PS: Many developers use Sodium Ascorbate or Sodium Isoascorbate and thereby avoid explicit addition of hydroxides or other strong alkalis.
The PEG-3350 is often used as a 100% pure over the counter laxative. Unsure of the brand names internationally, but in the US it's called MiraLAX. In theory any PEG of molecular weight between 1000 and 4000 should give similar improvements to contrast though
I needed the carbonate to raise pH or rather to neutralize the boric acid and ascorbic acid, but also I think I was aiming for the wrong set of balance. The formula had a working solution pH of 11.5-12, which is quite high for such a dilute lith developer. Boric acid seems a quite potent acidic buffer and it takes quite a bit of carbonate to break it. I actually have used TSP before but it's an extremely painful thing to use. Not very soluble and my bottle of it turned into a brick due to absorbed water.
The big reason to use ascorbic acid is it's more stable as a powder and in solution (of course, that doesn't apply if neutralized to ascorbate), more easily available, and part A needs to be at least mildly acidic either way for stability of the hydroquinone.
So I tried a new prototype. Kinda messed up in mixing it (doubled the water+glycol), but this is the intended formula:
- Start with 100ml of hot distilled water (distilled water is absolutely necessary here!)
- 2ml triethanolamine 99% grade
- 0.2g salicylic acid
- 15g ascorbic acid
- 8g sodium sulfite
- 13g hydroquinone
- Top to 200ml with hot propylene glycol
* 500ml
* 10ml part A
* 9g potassium carbonate
* 0.3g potassium bromide
* 0.5ml 1% PEG-3350
The results were very slow, though that's somewhat expected at this dilution. pH was adjusted to a proper value at about 11 when fresh and maybe a bit higher than 10.5 when used for 1 hour. Solution only weakly discolored to the typical ascorbic acid orange (rather than hydroquinone yellow) after 1 hour in the tray. No hydroquinone byproduct film formed on top of the developer after 1 hour. Ilford MGV RC could not reach proper dmax and due to very long dev time (20m) ended up having fog. Ilford ART 300 FB did develop well but also slowly. Very subtle mottling (seems typical of lith) in black tones. dmax was ok but not stellar. Tones were a subtle warm brown, and brown blacks. Notably, the previous formula could not produce good results on ART 300, it'd have a strong mottling affect that obscured detail. This may indicate that either borate, TEA or higher pH could have caused some of the difficulties in the previous formula on certain papers.
Recommendations: use less PEG, maybe 0.2ml. Slightly reduce bromide used, maybe 0.2g, add very small amount of BZT to keep fog down without affecting lith effect. Consider if reducing sulfite amount is required.
edit: Also notable is that the ART 300 developed almost exactly like Ilford Warmtone FB. Specifically it seemed to never "take off" in the lith developer, but darkened substantially when placed into the fixer. I'm personally not a fan of this effect and consider the results to be sub-par compared to the more typical "true" lith effect. Result was over developed as a result, but with no fog. iirc dev time was 10m
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