Photo Engineer
Subscriber
I have been asked by several people in the last 6 months to comment on their own brand of home brew color chemistry.
Here is the hardest point to make with anyone, and I am sharing it with you.
Do not use the wrong color developing agent for your material!
CD3 = E6 and RA
CD4 = C41
CD6 = Kodachrome yellow only, the M and C are CD3
If you use CD4 for color paper, you will get desaturated colors and about 1/2 to 1/4th the image stability. Your pictures will fade very quickly if CD4 is used for color papers. This is also true for CD4 use in E6. Very bad for color and image stability.
Use of CD3 in place of CD4 for films will give desaturated images with low Dmax unless you compensate in the formula by using a booster to improve dye yeild. No, I will not offer any suggestions! Too chancy.
CD6 remains untested at this point in any modern product except Kodachrome. At the time we ceased testing at EK, it was beating everything hands down on a number of fronts, but just a change in coupler could negate that picture so I cannot suggest that anyone use CD6.
The older developing agents, CD1 and CD2 are much more prone to cause skin problems (dermatitis) and to give much poorer dye stability and hue. Besides which, they tend to form tar and oil as the developer is used.
There is the summary for you if you want to make your own.
PE
Here is the hardest point to make with anyone, and I am sharing it with you.
Do not use the wrong color developing agent for your material!
CD3 = E6 and RA
CD4 = C41
CD6 = Kodachrome yellow only, the M and C are CD3
If you use CD4 for color paper, you will get desaturated colors and about 1/2 to 1/4th the image stability. Your pictures will fade very quickly if CD4 is used for color papers. This is also true for CD4 use in E6. Very bad for color and image stability.
Use of CD3 in place of CD4 for films will give desaturated images with low Dmax unless you compensate in the formula by using a booster to improve dye yeild. No, I will not offer any suggestions! Too chancy.
CD6 remains untested at this point in any modern product except Kodachrome. At the time we ceased testing at EK, it was beating everything hands down on a number of fronts, but just a change in coupler could negate that picture so I cannot suggest that anyone use CD6.
The older developing agents, CD1 and CD2 are much more prone to cause skin problems (dermatitis) and to give much poorer dye stability and hue. Besides which, they tend to form tar and oil as the developer is used.
There is the summary for you if you want to make your own.
PE