I'm looking to use the Arista Ortho Litho 2.0 film to make enlarged negatives for alternative process printing. The idea being to enlarge a positive sheet and then contact print that back to a negative.
There seems to be a lot of different info out there for this film so I figured I would just jump in and tried using Dektol diltued 1:9, developing the film in trays under dim red safelight. I just did what I would normally do for paper which is agitate it for a minute or two until it looks like it has stopped developing. The results looked pretty decent although they do seem contrasty and possibly lacking shadow detail, although that is just from looking at the film I have yet to try printing one.
A few questions:
I realize that Freestyle recommends their own developers for this film but I'd rather start with the ones I use normally and try to get the best results from those. Although if you do have a proven developer/method for making dupes like this then please feel free to suggest it.
There seems to be a lot of different info out there for this film so I figured I would just jump in and tried using Dektol diltued 1:9, developing the film in trays under dim red safelight. I just did what I would normally do for paper which is agitate it for a minute or two until it looks like it has stopped developing. The results looked pretty decent although they do seem contrasty and possibly lacking shadow detail, although that is just from looking at the film I have yet to try printing one.
A few questions:
- Is a minute or two long enough to fully develop? I'm seeing some suggestions that this film should be fully developed for 5-6 minutes.
- Would reducing agitation help hold contrast?
- Any thoughts on developer dilution with Dektol? Too dilute?
I realize that Freestyle recommends their own developers for this film but I'd rather start with the ones I use normally and try to get the best results from those. Although if you do have a proven developer/method for making dupes like this then please feel free to suggest it.

