It is very easy to make paper developer. You need only metol, sodium sulphite, hydroquinone, sodium carbonate. and potassium bromide. Here is one of many similar formulas:
Dupont Developer 53-D
A general-purpose developer reproducing neutral black tones on contact and enlarging papers; it may also be used for tray development of sheet films and plates. This formula is similar to, but not identical with, Kodak Developer D-72.
Stock Solution
Water .................... 16 ounces (500cc)
Metol ..................... 45 grains (3.0 g)
sodium sulfite, anhydrous .................... 1.5 ounces ( 45 g)
hydroquinone .......................... 175 grains (12 g)
sodium carbonate, anhydrous .............. 2.25 ounces (67.5g)
potassium bromide ................. 27 grains (1.9 grams)
add cold water to make ................... 32 ounces (1 L)
Dissolve chemicals in the order given.
For paper - dilute one part of stock solution with two parts of water. Develop projection paper for 1.5 to 2.5 minutes at 68F (20C).
55D is interesting because it is unique and not a copy of a Kodak formula as were most Defender developers. It is less active than Dektol but more active than Selectol or other "warm tone" developers. It Should work for any paper.
Defender used to recommend adding lots of bromide to it to warm the results, however, the formula in the Darkroom Cookbook gives the maximum, not the range. I've found this book gets it slightly wrong just a little too often.
From a Defender publication:
Defender 55D
Stock Solution
Water (125F or 52C) 500.0 ml
Metol 2.5 grams
Sodium Sulfite, dessicated 37.5 grams
Hydroquinone 10.0 grams
Sodium Carbonate, anhydrous 37.5 grams (mono 45g)
Potassium Bromide 4 to 13 grams
Water to make 1.0 liter
Defender 54-D
Metol 2.7g
Sodium sulfite (anhy) 40.2 g
Hydroquinone 10.5g
Sodium carbonate (anhy) 75g (mono 90g)
KBr 0.8g
Water to 1 litre
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