Wigwam Jones
Member
I recently purchased an old book, "Chemistry for Photographers" by Allen R. Greenleaf, published 1941 by American Photographic Publishing Company, Boston, MA.
I have been collecting various film developing formulas with an eye towards eventually compounding my own B&W soup. I have begun to notice the similarities many formulas have to each other. This one, however, seems very different:
Fine-Grain Developer (Lumiere "Supermicros")
Orthophenylenediamine 146 Grains (10.0 grams)
Metol 73 Grains (5.0 grams)
Sodium sulphite 2 Ounces (60.0 grams)
Tri-sodium phosphate 51 Grains (3.5 grams)
Potassium bromide 10 Grains (0.7 grams)
Water to make 32 ounces (1.0 liters)
I have not read anything like this before. I am not a chemist and do not know what "Orthophenylenediamine" is or how available it might be these days, let alone the "Tri-sodium phosphate," unless that is the "TSP" you can buy at the local hardware store (I suspect that isn't pure TSP, though).
I have also come across a "Rapid Developer" (J.I. Waters) which claims to process film in 20 seconds (17 seconds dip in dev, 3 seconds to get it into short stop, then fix). I can post that recipe if anyone's interested.
In the meantime, anyone familiar with the Lumiere Supermicros or this kind of formula?
Best,
Wiggy
I have been collecting various film developing formulas with an eye towards eventually compounding my own B&W soup. I have begun to notice the similarities many formulas have to each other. This one, however, seems very different:
Fine-Grain Developer (Lumiere "Supermicros")
Orthophenylenediamine 146 Grains (10.0 grams)
Metol 73 Grains (5.0 grams)
Sodium sulphite 2 Ounces (60.0 grams)
Tri-sodium phosphate 51 Grains (3.5 grams)
Potassium bromide 10 Grains (0.7 grams)
Water to make 32 ounces (1.0 liters)
I have not read anything like this before. I am not a chemist and do not know what "Orthophenylenediamine" is or how available it might be these days, let alone the "Tri-sodium phosphate," unless that is the "TSP" you can buy at the local hardware store (I suspect that isn't pure TSP, though).
I have also come across a "Rapid Developer" (J.I. Waters) which claims to process film in 20 seconds (17 seconds dip in dev, 3 seconds to get it into short stop, then fix). I can post that recipe if anyone's interested.
In the meantime, anyone familiar with the Lumiere Supermicros or this kind of formula?
Best,
Wiggy