Oriental Seagull VC fibre, what developer?

On the edge of town.

A
On the edge of town.

  • 2
  • 1
  • 35
Peaceful

D
Peaceful

  • 2
  • 11
  • 163
Cycling with wife #2

D
Cycling with wife #2

  • 1
  • 3
  • 72
Time's up!

D
Time's up!

  • 1
  • 1
  • 66
Green room

A
Green room

  • 5
  • 2
  • 125

Recent Classifieds

Forum statistics

Threads
198,253
Messages
2,771,671
Members
99,580
Latest member
byteseller
Recent bookmarks
0

livemoa

Member
Joined
Aug 12, 2003
Messages
434
Location
Was New Zeal
Format
Multi Format
I have some of this paper to try out and will be making enlargements from 35mm negs. The negs have good shadow detail in most cases and I would like, if possibile to hold highlights without to much burning..... What paper developers do you all use/recommend and why?

Thanking in advance
 

Grady O

Member
Joined
May 26, 2003
Messages
113
Location
Mass, USA
Format
Medium Format
I have been using Sprint developer, which is ok. It gives neutral to cold tones. I think I'm going to switch soon, not because I'm not happy, but because I want to try other things. So I'll be interested in what others say because I know its a very nice paper.
 

david b

Member
Joined
Oct 20, 2003
Messages
4,026
Location
None of your
Format
Medium Format
I would do this:

1.5 minutes in selectol soft and then 1.5 minutes in dektol.

the selectol soft will just do the highlight first, and then the dektol will take care of the midtones and shadow detail.
 

Ka

Member
Joined
Feb 19, 2004
Messages
215
Location
New York
Format
Medium Format
david b,

At what dilution Selectol Soft and Dektol for the Seagull? Also, who sells Selectol Soft?
 

Ole

Moderator
Moderator
Joined
Sep 9, 2002
Messages
9,244
Location
Bergen, Norway
Format
Large Format
As long as I still have some Glycin left, I use Ansco130. It's a wonderful developer, and lasts foreve. My last batch was mixed in October. By now it's so dark that it's difficult to find the print in the tray, but it still works. When I get home again in two weeks time I'll mix a new batch - just because of the colour.

It also happens to work very well with Seagull VC.
 

skahde

Member
Joined
Feb 16, 2004
Messages
492
Location
Germany
Format
Multi Format
Ole,

Ansco 130 has hard to beat keeping capabilities, but what is the tone of your prints like in that old developer? I found that my prints became more and more brown in the shadows (Agfa MCC), from the accumlating halide in the Ansco 130 I assume. An effect I dindn't find very pleasing and which turned to an unusual and annoying green cast in selenium. Fortunately the toned prints turned neutral when dry (piuh!).

Stefan
 

Ole

Moderator
Moderator
Joined
Sep 9, 2002
Messages
9,244
Location
Bergen, Norway
Format
Large Format
skahde said:
Ansco 130 has hard to beat keeping capabilities, but what is the tone of your prints like in that old developer?
Stefan

There's been a very gradual "warming" of the image tone all over, but with very big differences between different papers. The Bergger one without baryta layer (can never remember what it's called) is absolutely neutral, and if anything has actually cooled a bit. Fortezo museum is very warm, Bergger Art CB much less so.

If I remember correctly. I could have told you for certain yesterday, as I have a set of identical prints (as close as possible) made on 12 different papers and developed in (then) four-months-old Ansco130. And now I'm 500 kilometers away.
But I do rememember that none were greenish except Emaks, which I have other reasons to dislike.
 

doughowk

Member
Joined
Feb 11, 2003
Messages
1,809
Location
Kalamazoo, MI
Format
Large Format
Photographers Formulary version of Dektol (TD-30) has neutral to cool tone with Oriental Seagull, but regular Dektol imparts an olive brown color to the paper. Sprint Quicksilver has similiar results to TD-30, while PF-130 (Ansco 130) seemed less contrasty. I just use developer, water stop bath, TF-4 fixer, then wash - trying to keep process simple.
 

skahde

Member
Joined
Feb 16, 2004
Messages
492
Location
Germany
Format
Multi Format
doughowk said:
Photographers Formulary version of Dektol (TD-30) has neutral to cool tone with Oriental Seagull, but regular Dektol imparts an olive brown color to the paper.

D72 made with Bromide (aka grandpa's Dektol) gives the olive tint. Replacing the bromide with 0,2g Benzotriazol leads to a neutral to coldish colour. This is what I use with Agfa MCC right now if the subject asks for a neutral to cold tone.

Stefan
 

Donald Miller

Member
Joined
Dec 21, 2002
Messages
6,230
Format
Large Format
I use Zone VI print developer (very near Dektol but improved support for shadows) on Oriental Seagull (graded and VC). This gives me a neutral print tone. I also use my formula for Pyro Plus Paper Developer which seems to also give a neutral tone with seemingly deeper blacks and improved tonal separation.
 

Tom Stanworth

Member
Joined
Sep 4, 2003
Messages
2,021
Format
Multi Format
You wont go far wrong. I have used ilford bromophen, multigrade and tetenal eukobrom all with excellent results. IMHO all good quality devs produce good results and other elements of your technique (dev time vs exposure etc, contrast...) will have far more of a bearing on the scale of the print than the paper dev - colour is a differnt matter. Multigrade is very neutral, eukobrom a nice blue black. Oriental is my favourite neutral/cool paper! This paper tones very well in selenium for a cool blue/purple black. Picks up a lot of density fast so take care.

Tom
 

chrisg

Member
Joined
Jan 5, 2004
Messages
22
I've used Dektol 1+2 and Ansco 130 (Photographers' Formulary 130) 1+2 with Seagull VC. I print mostly on Ilford MG IV FB. By comparison, I found Seagull VC to be about one grade softer than MGIV, i.e., negs that printed with a #2 filter on MGIV printed with a #3 filter with Seagull, and that max black was not quite as dark with MGIV.

Chris
 

Gary Grenell

Member
Joined
Nov 27, 2004
Messages
80
Location
Seattle
Format
Medium Format
How's this for a radical idea...Dektol 1:2. It seems to work fine. The image first appears in 1 minute and is fully developed by 2.5 minutes. This is by way of contrast to Zonal Pro, which is very, very slow. It took me close to 2 minutes for the image to begin emerging and a total development time of over 3 minutes, closer to 4. Too slow for me.

Gary
 

Gary Grenell

Member
Joined
Nov 27, 2004
Messages
80
Location
Seattle
Format
Medium Format
Tom...have you used a current crop of the Oriental paper. As I am mentioning in some other posts, I am presently NOT able to get it to tone toward purplish. I don;t really want my blacks to look eggplanty, but I do want that very slight hint of purple that comes when the selenium is working. I am not certain why I am not obtaining that result.

Gary
 

Donald Miller

Member
Joined
Dec 21, 2002
Messages
6,230
Format
Large Format
david b said:
I would do this:

1.5 minutes in selectol soft and then 1.5 minutes in dektol.

the selectol soft will just do the highlight first, and then the dektol will take care of the midtones and shadow detail.

My question is why one would consider using this choice of two developers with a VC paper...this is a technique used many years ago with graded papers; the effect was to move "between grades"...hardly necessary or attractive in this time of variable contrast materials.

I have used Seagull VCFB for years. I used graded materials before that. There are several single developers that will work very well with this paper. My personal choice has been Zone VI or Dektol for off the shelf developers...my Pyro Plus Paper Developer will work very nicely if one is into mixing their own concoction.

I concur with Tom about the selenium toning effects of this paper..
 

ann

Subscriber
Joined
Sep 10, 2002
Messages
3,336
Format
35mm
gary, i seem to remember on another thread that you were using a HCA with the selenium; if so, try water instead.

Years ago using HCA was very common but with new testing , many have found it more productive to switch to water. ALso, are you using your mixture as a one shot toner. Current "wisdom" indicates that if one is using a HCA instead of water it should be used as a one shot process.
 

kiku

Subscriber
Joined
Dec 5, 2004
Messages
131
Location
Moorpark, Ca
Format
Multi Format
Gary Grenell said:
How's this for a radical idea...Dektol 1:2. It seems to work fine.
Gary

Hi Gary! Yeh, that "radical" photographer Ansel Adams also liked Dektol 1:2.
(sad that so many people these days like to criticise his work). Kiku
 

Tom Stanworth

Member
Joined
Sep 4, 2003
Messages
2,021
Format
Multi Format
Gary Grenell said:
Tom...have you used a current crop of the Oriental paper. As I am mentioning in some other posts, I am presently NOT able to get it to tone toward purplish. I don;t really want my blacks to look eggplanty, but I do want that very slight hint of purple that comes when the selenium is working. I am not certain why I am not obtaining that result.

Gary

My papers are the regular G and VC FB papers (not the latest GF series graded). I have had no problems with a subtle shift towards a cool deep purple black but then again all my paper is at least 6 months old....maybe something changed? I have had no issues regardless of my slapdash approach to selenium concentration.

Tom
 

jstewart

Member
Joined
Oct 22, 2003
Messages
21
Location
Leesburg, VA
I just recently started using VC papers (all FB). I'm still experimenting with Afga Classic, Ilford MC, Forte Polycontrast, Kodak Polymax Fine Art, and Oriental Seagull. I develop in Ansco 120 1+2 (with benzotriazole as restrainer) or D72 with KBr restrainer.

My toning experiments in Sel 1:19 (to get a purple black hue) on A120 prints were disappointing. Only Forte PC toned at all, and that was more a "warming" of the image. Prints were left in the toner for 20 minutes at 70 deg F. I toned a Forte print printed in D72 in Sel 1:19... it quickly toned a distinct brown versus purple.

I'm wondering what could explain why some can get a good hue shift with Sel while others don't. Should I be using a stronger dilution of Selenium (I use KRST by the way).

Jim
 

Les McLean

Subscriber
Joined
Oct 18, 2002
Messages
1,606
Location
Northern Eng
Format
Multi Format
Donald Miller said:
My question is why one would consider using this choice of two developers with a VC paper...this is a technique used many years ago with graded papers; the effect was to move "between grades"...hardly necessary or attractive in this time of variable contrast materials.


Using two bath developers with VC papers provides another level of control, for example, when very delicate high values are required in the print.
 

Tom Stanworth

Member
Joined
Sep 4, 2003
Messages
2,021
Format
Multi Format
jstewart said:
My toning experiments in Sel 1:19 .......

I'm wondering what could explain why some can get a good hue shift with Sel while others don't. Should I be using a stronger dilution of Selenium (I use KRST by the way).

Jim


Stronger dilutions induce much more colour change, normally. Warmer papers shift in tone more obviously than cool papers and warm papers often change colour quite easily even if dilute selenium used (esp forte). KRST is potent stuff and colour shift take place with Forte PWT or PG at 1+19 very comfortably (too fast for me). I dilute approx double this or use very cold when using forte papers otherwise you end up with a rust red/plum in no time at all esp if the solutions are warm (I often tone outdoors in the summer). shift also depends upon the image tones. If an image has few half tones, you will see less colour shift as most tones are either black or pale grey. Warm tone images where there are lots of middle values show the greatest apparent colour change. Most cold papers show a change in colour only noticeable in comparison with a wet untoned print, esp if a cold tone dev used in the first place. I find that when toning for Dmax with cold papers an untoned wet reference print in an adjacent tray is essential for seeing how far the Dmax has increased and to make sure you dont get confused and go too far and reduce Dmax.
 

photobackpacker

Advertiser
Advertiser
Joined
Mar 21, 2005
Messages
430
Location
Minnesota
Format
4x5 Format
david b said:
I would do this:

1.5 minutes in selectol soft and then 1.5 minutes in dektol.

the selectol soft will just do the highlight first, and then the dektol will take care of the midtones and shadow detail.

Why would you go here as a starting point? If the negatives have good detail, you don't need Selectol Soft. Dektol will do a fine job. The approach you have suggested is to gain a 1/2 papergrade contrast reduction. It is a step that is used to fine-tune a print being made with graded paper. To suggest this as the initial approach to the negatives is puzzling.
 

Tom Stanworth

Member
Joined
Sep 4, 2003
Messages
2,021
Format
Multi Format
blaughn said:
Why would you go here as a starting point? If the negatives have good detail, you don't need Selectol Soft. Dektol will do a fine job. The approach you have suggested is to gain a 1/2 papergrade contrast reduction. It is a step that is used to fine-tune a print being made with graded paper. To suggest this as the initial approach to the negatives is puzzling.

I agree, keep things simple. I print at one grade when it is all I need. I only complicate thigs when I have to.........

I have found that the more time I spend printing, the less I have to try complex things as I am better in control of the basics and can massage them to work better for me than previously (like small changes in main grade, dev time, and toning time/concentration. I would never initially approach a print as a split grade as normally this just is not neccessary apart from perhaps some local hard or soft. Split grade for me, is for when the simple tools dont work. Sometimes one is pleaseantly surpised how easy a print can be. I would hate to have spent time zeroing in for split grades when my second attempt is spot on......
 

photobackpacker

Advertiser
Advertiser
Joined
Mar 21, 2005
Messages
430
Location
Minnesota
Format
4x5 Format
Tom Stanworth said:
I agree, keep things simple. I print at one grade when it is all I need. I only complicate thigs when I have to.........

I have found that the more time I spend printing, the less I have to try complex things as I am better in control of the basics and can massage them to work better for me than previously (like small changes in main grade, dev time, and toning time/concentration. I would never initially approach a print as a split grade as normally this just is not neccessary apart from perhaps some local hard or soft. Split grade for me, is for when the simple tools dont work. Sometimes one is pleaseantly surpised how easy a print can be. I would hate to have spent time zeroing in for split grades when my second attempt is spot on......

Amen. I used to experiment with different developers, film, paper, toners. I discovered this camouflaged the fact that I am the weak link and handling all of the complexity kept me from concentrating on the learning and discipline needed to improve my contribution to the process.

Start with one film, one paper, one developer for each and work with them until you can verbalize why you need to change. If you want help selecting what materials to work with, look to the pros - not the seekers. I am a huge fan of John Sexton. He uses Tmax 100, Tmax RS 1:9 and xtol. He prints primarily on Polymax Fine Art using dektol 1:2. I have seen his work first hand and if these materials satisfy his requirements, they satisfy mine. When I use these materials, I am certain I am not being held back because the developer doesn't handle the shadows well. If my shadows are empty, it is because I failed to place them at an appropriate level on the film.
 
Photrio.com contains affiliate links to products. We may receive a commission for purchases made through these links.
To read our full affiliate disclosure statement please click Here.

PHOTRIO PARTNERS EQUALLY FUNDING OUR COMMUNITY:



Ilford ADOX Freestyle Photographic Stearman Press Weldon Color Lab Blue Moon Camera & Machine
Top Bottom