nick mulder
Member
- Joined
- May 15, 2005
- Messages
- 1,212
- Format
- 8x10 Format
Hi,
I mixed up some reversal bleach the other day and it it looked exactly like flat lucozade so it me thinking about household products and foodstuffs as potentially useful chems in B+W processing - there must be plenty of drink and liquids that have active ingredients in them that could be utilised if you were so inclined
An easy example if if I remember correctly is that stop bath is acetic acid so vinegar would do the job nicely as a replacement ...
My question is are there any other foodstuffs, liquids or household items that could be used for other parts of the development process ?
For example mix two parts pineapple juice, teaspoon of shoe polish, white pepper and 'orange zest' bodyshop soap shavings for a film developer ...
...channel no.5 mixed with dandruff makes a great fixer - etc...
you get the picture -
I have a lot of time on my hands at the moment and am keen to experiment and learn more about the chemistry of processing - the quality does not need to be perfect, and I am all for overnight developing times if they are required...
any info appreciated,
thanks,
nick
I mixed up some reversal bleach the other day and it it looked exactly like flat lucozade so it me thinking about household products and foodstuffs as potentially useful chems in B+W processing - there must be plenty of drink and liquids that have active ingredients in them that could be utilised if you were so inclined
An easy example if if I remember correctly is that stop bath is acetic acid so vinegar would do the job nicely as a replacement ...
My question is are there any other foodstuffs, liquids or household items that could be used for other parts of the development process ?
For example mix two parts pineapple juice, teaspoon of shoe polish, white pepper and 'orange zest' bodyshop soap shavings for a film developer ...
...channel no.5 mixed with dandruff makes a great fixer - etc...
you get the picture -
I have a lot of time on my hands at the moment and am keen to experiment and learn more about the chemistry of processing - the quality does not need to be perfect, and I am all for overnight developing times if they are required...
any info appreciated,
thanks,
nick