Hi all,
I've been developing b&w paper (FB) for over 15 years. Some recent reading about the use of replenished developer for negatives ((there was a url link here which no longer exists) in particular) has made me wonder for the first time all these years if I'm doing the right thing with my paper developer.
What I do is I make two liters (Amaloco AM6006 1+9). I use that until I 'feel' that it starts to exhaust. Then I add some developer (diluted somewhat arbitrarily) to get to 2l again. I go on and on with the same stock and it seems to work fine, i.e. I get nice prints, nothing to complain about.
My question is: is there any advantage and/or disadvantage to my 'method' as compared to just chucking all of the developer solution after exhaustion and starting with a totally fresh solution?
Does the 'replenished' (if that's the right word) paper developer contain things that harm the paper in any way (longevity, quality of print, pollution of fixer, that sort of thing)? Or is there some seasoning taking place in the over-and-over-reused stock that actually benefits the quality of the print, like with seasoned negative developers?
I don't see anything particularly wrong or fantastic about my prints. They're good enough for me and they last just fine. Just wondering aloud.
[Btw, I use Kentmere FPVC, both glossy and fine grain, mostly 12x16 (30x40), developed in Amaloco 6006, then acidic stop bath and Adox Adofix 1+4 single bath. I used to use Agfa MCC until 'forced' to switch, to Kentmere in my case- great paper also.]
Thanks, Sander.
I've been developing b&w paper (FB) for over 15 years. Some recent reading about the use of replenished developer for negatives ((there was a url link here which no longer exists) in particular) has made me wonder for the first time all these years if I'm doing the right thing with my paper developer.
What I do is I make two liters (Amaloco AM6006 1+9). I use that until I 'feel' that it starts to exhaust. Then I add some developer (diluted somewhat arbitrarily) to get to 2l again. I go on and on with the same stock and it seems to work fine, i.e. I get nice prints, nothing to complain about.
My question is: is there any advantage and/or disadvantage to my 'method' as compared to just chucking all of the developer solution after exhaustion and starting with a totally fresh solution?
Does the 'replenished' (if that's the right word) paper developer contain things that harm the paper in any way (longevity, quality of print, pollution of fixer, that sort of thing)? Or is there some seasoning taking place in the over-and-over-reused stock that actually benefits the quality of the print, like with seasoned negative developers?
I don't see anything particularly wrong or fantastic about my prints. They're good enough for me and they last just fine. Just wondering aloud.
[Btw, I use Kentmere FPVC, both glossy and fine grain, mostly 12x16 (30x40), developed in Amaloco 6006, then acidic stop bath and Adox Adofix 1+4 single bath. I used to use Agfa MCC until 'forced' to switch, to Kentmere in my case- great paper also.]
Thanks, Sander.

