Juan Valdenebro
Member
After using Perceptol happily with several films, I feel metol developers are the real thing, and we can decide to lose some image quality to gain a stop of speed using standard MQ developers, or lose even more IQ and go for one more stop of speed with a speed enhancing developer, just to describe things quickly.
In the past I did test K400 (never liked it too much, really: not as much as best films) in MQ and speed developers, and in Rodinal, but never in a metol developer, so this time I ordered some K400 rolls among my more usual films, wanting to see K400 at EI200 in Perceptol Stock, not diluted, as grain is really present in that film, and I won't need contrast control: no direct sunlight. I just want to make the film work better than I was able before, talking about image structure... Not being a too modern type of grain film, it's possible to imagine Perceptol stock helping it at EI200 for portraiture.
But the only recommendation by the manufacturer, for Perceptol, is 1+1 (EI320) with a time above 20 minutes... I wonder what's the reason (or reasons) for that.
Stock is not even recommended, and it would of course make a shorter and more convenient development time: I'm surprised... Why could that be?
Maybe they don't expect people to really use Perceptol stock in general, but only 1+1?
Maybe the film doesn't look good after stock?
Or could it be they didn't want to say the film requires EI200 in any developer?
Perhaps some forum members can understand (or imagine) and share a few possible reasons.
Thanks.
In the past I did test K400 (never liked it too much, really: not as much as best films) in MQ and speed developers, and in Rodinal, but never in a metol developer, so this time I ordered some K400 rolls among my more usual films, wanting to see K400 at EI200 in Perceptol Stock, not diluted, as grain is really present in that film, and I won't need contrast control: no direct sunlight. I just want to make the film work better than I was able before, talking about image structure... Not being a too modern type of grain film, it's possible to imagine Perceptol stock helping it at EI200 for portraiture.
But the only recommendation by the manufacturer, for Perceptol, is 1+1 (EI320) with a time above 20 minutes... I wonder what's the reason (or reasons) for that.
Stock is not even recommended, and it would of course make a shorter and more convenient development time: I'm surprised... Why could that be?
Maybe they don't expect people to really use Perceptol stock in general, but only 1+1?
Maybe the film doesn't look good after stock?
Or could it be they didn't want to say the film requires EI200 in any developer?
Perhaps some forum members can understand (or imagine) and share a few possible reasons.
Thanks.