My quest for grain continues. No, I'm not always doing this, and I do know that by using a roll of FP4 and Extol, or HP5 in HC110 in medium format, I'm going to get nice, fine grained pictures that I like a lot, will print well, and look great framed on the wall. But I'm still searching for the past, when I want a gritty effect.
In the Film Developer Cookbook, it states that Kodak D76 Replenisher can be used as a push developer as long as grain is not a factor. I immediately perked up.
Now, D76R no longer seems to be available, but I have a bottle of quasi-ersatz HC110 Replenisher from the redoubtable Legacy Pro folks. And a bottle of their quasi-ersatz HC110.
I'm wondering what I might expect if I mix up a batch of the Replenisher at 1:5, and slosh a roll of ASA 400 film through it? Anybody tried anything like this?
Thanks again!!
PS - I'm also tempted to mix the Replenisher and Developer half and half, dilute that mixture about 1:5 and give it whirl, too. Maybe I will, and let you know what happens. :alien:
In the Film Developer Cookbook, it states that Kodak D76 Replenisher can be used as a push developer as long as grain is not a factor. I immediately perked up.
Now, D76R no longer seems to be available, but I have a bottle of quasi-ersatz HC110 Replenisher from the redoubtable Legacy Pro folks. And a bottle of their quasi-ersatz HC110.
I'm wondering what I might expect if I mix up a batch of the Replenisher at 1:5, and slosh a roll of ASA 400 film through it? Anybody tried anything like this?
Thanks again!!

PS - I'm also tempted to mix the Replenisher and Developer half and half, dilute that mixture about 1:5 and give it whirl, too. Maybe I will, and let you know what happens. :alien:
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