I've seen many posts here about how people should mix their own chemicals, and there are plenty of resources for formulas, but I haven't seen anyone put together a basic getting started list with a list of the basic ingredients you should have at hand and the most popular formulas. I've tried putting together such a list, but I am pretty new at this, so points, help and tips are very much appreciated.
General advice
When mixing a formula, you should generally start with the water. Add ingredients one at a time in the order given in the formula, making sure each chemical has fully dissolved before you add the next one. Glass, plastic and stainless steel are generally appropriate as stir-rods, but beware that cheap steel might tarnish. Some formulas are sensitive to iron ions, avoid using steel when mixing these. Formulas might have special instructions deviating from the general advice, Make sure you wear your PPE, gloves, eye-protection and in some cases a respirator. Many photo chemicals are toxic and/or mutagenic, you need dedicated equipment not used for other purposes.
Several chemicals are available with different amounts of water molecules (H
2O) incorporated in the crystal structure. These are almost always interchangeable, certainly in aqueous solutions (i.e. solutions containing water), though you have to adjust the amount. If there's no water it's termed "anhydrous", otherwise it'll be termed "monohydrate", "dihydrate", "trihydrate", etc. indicating how much water is incorporated. If it's not stated on the packaging, the easiest way to determine what compound you have is generally to google the CAS-number, which uniquely identifies the compound. In formula form the number of water molecules per unit cell is spelled out explicitly, so sodium sulfite heptahydrate is Na
2SO
3 · 7H
2O)
One of the biggest advantages of mixing your own chemistry is that you can mix just the amount you need. To scale a formula up or down to the amount you need, simply scale all ingredients by the same factor. E.g. to convert from a formula to make a liter to make 200 ml, you'd divide all ingredients by 5.
Good places to look for formulas are
The Darkroom Cookbook,
Digital Truth and - of course - this forum.
Equipment
You will need some basic equipment to get started.
- Scale(s) that can measure 0 - 10 g at 0.1 g accuracy, and 10 - 250 g at 1 g accuracy.
- Weigh ship to weigh chemicals in (can be folded paper or coffee filters)
- Container to mix chemistry in
- Stir rod
Film developers
Developers generally consists of one or two developing agents (metol, hydroquinone, ascorbic acid, pyrogalol, etc) plus support chemicals that regulate activity, pH and scavenge oxygen. Below are some common developers you can mix yourself.
D23 (1 l)
Water |
900 ml |
Metol (Kodak calls it "Elon") |
7.5 g |
Sodium Sulfite, anhydrous (Na2SO3) |
100 g |
Cold water to make 1000 ml |
D76 (1 l)
Water at ~50 °C (~125 °F) |
750 ml |
Metol |
2 g |
Hydroquinone |
5 g |
Sodium Sulfite, anhydrous (Na2SO3) |
100 g |
Borax (Na2B4O7 · 10H2O) |
2 g |
Cold water to make 1000 ml |
Caffenol (1 l)
Water |
900 ml |
Sodium carbonate, anhydrous (Na2CO3) |
24 g |
Ascorbic acid |
20 g |
Instant coffee |
45 g |
Cold water to make 1000 ml |
(Personally I'm not a fan of Caffenol, as I think it's a waste of coffee. I prefer PC-TEA or Mytol for self mixed ascorbic acid developers, but caffenol is much more common)
510 Pyro (100 ml)
TEA (triethanolamine) |
75 ml |
Ascorbic acid |
5 g |
Pyrogallol |
10 g |
Phenidone |
0.375 g |
TEA to make 100 ml |
NB: Pyrogallol is fairly nasty, mix in a well ventilated area and consider using a respirator.
Paper developers
Paper developers are very similar to film developers, but are generally higher contrast.
D72 (1 l)
Water at ~50 °C (~125 °F) |
500 ml |
Metol |
3.1 g |
Sodium sulfite, anhydrous |
45 g |
Hydroquinone |
12 g |
Sodium carbonate, anhydrous |
67.5 g |
Potassium bromide |
1.9 g |
Cold water to make 1000 ml |
Dektol-like, neutral paper developer.
Ansco 130
Water at ~50 °C (~125 °F) |
750 ml |
Metol |
2.2 g |
Sodium sulfite, anhydrous |
50 g |
Hydroquinone |
11 g |
Sodium carbonate, anhydrous |
65 g |
Potassium bromide |
5.5 g |
Glycin |
11 g |
Cold water to make 1000 ml |
General purpose paper developer, reportedly gives very good blacks.
Miscellaneous
Hypo clear/wash aid (1 l)
Water |
750 ml |
Sodium sulfite, anhydrous |
100 g |
Sodium metabisulfite (Na2S2O5) |
25 g |
Cold water to make 1000 ml |
Dilute stock 1+4 to get working solution
Starting chemicals
Here's a list of chemicals to buy to get started, which will allow you to mix the most common stuff, along with some suggested amounts. Supplement with the ingredients for the specific formula you're interested in.
- Metol, 20 - 50g
- Hydroquinone, 20 - 50g
- Ascorbic acid, 50 - 100g
- Sodium sulfite, 500 g - 1 kg
- Sodium metabisulfite, 100 - 250 g
- Borax, 10 - 50 g
- Sodium carbonate, 50 - 200g
- Potassium bromide, 10 - 30g
- Sodium thiosulfate, 500 g - 1 kg
- Acetic acid