ChristopherCoy
Subscriber
I dumped it.
When I used Caffenol I chose the basic Nescafe instant as it was freely obtainable from the local Co-Op. I'm not sure about your use of home cooked sodium bicarbonate to try and make sodium carbonate. Sodium Carbonate anhydrous is easy to source, it's even on eBay!
Try again with real sodium carbonate. You need it for the alkali...
Persevere because it's a very good developer. If Pyro and Catechol were not such fantastic reducers I'd still be using Caffenol.
RR
totally understand, when melted off my emulsion i didn't use caffenol for about 6 months
and i haven't used my rotary processor since ...
you have the ingredients, if you ever want to try again ... just get different coffee
folgers works, nescafé works if in france, "old gringo" works at shaws - medium roast instant works
and so far the beans i use haven't failed me ...
WHY did it melt off though?
Is it because I used baked baking soda? Is it because I used cheap Family Dollar brand instant coffee? Did I not wait long enough before pouring it in? Is it because I did a presoak? Do I need to chill my liquid because the water was about 80F degrees out of the faucet?
It would appear that this time I have images! Washing for five minutes now.
Me too!STOKED!
i am very happy it worked
nice negs too![]()
I do believe..... that I'm going to enjoy this whole "instant-coffee-make your own-developer" thing.
See! Worth persevering for! Beautiful dog BTW...
RR
I'd have been amazed if 80 or even 82 degrees Fahrenheit produced problems with the emulsion on a tough film like HP5+. By mistake I once washed mine for may be 15-30 secs in water that was way more than mid 80s and no issues
So any idea as to what went wrong with the first film? Frankly I still suspect fix first but whatever it was here's hoping that it has been eliminated
pentaxuser
....and now that I'm thinking about it. That roll of film sat in my hot car for a couple of days before I brought it in to develop it. I had forgot it in the center console....
So maybe the excessive heat killed it before it even had a chance to be put in the chemicals.
I had forgot about that.....
Heat won't kill it - just make it old (go grey) before its time.
All developers need all of their component parts to work properly. In some cases, if you miss something, it won't work at all.
If the job of the baking soda/washing soda was to change the pH to a range that permits all the rest of the components to work (i.e. to reduce the exposed silver halides), and the soda doesn't do its job, the rest of the components may not have been able to do their jobs.
If the exposed silver halides aren't reduced by the developer, then the fixer will just remove them from the film.
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