marcsv said:I really liked the final prints i got from this brew...I'm seriously thinking of using this as my primary print developer rather than D76. The prints I made had a warm brownish tone, I cant wait to try this with split - grade printing.
Yeah, I second that, let's see prints if someone has something they want to show.
EDIT: If that doesn't happen, I'll have to get around to do some myself and post. But that'll take a few days or a week...
Another consideration. p-aminophenol, the agent of either Rodinal or Parodinal, is synergistic with either hydroquinone or sodium ascorbate. 4 grams (1 teaspoon) of ascorbate in a liter of 1+50 Rodinal is about as active as 1+25 Rodinal. If you use hydroquinone, control the color of the print by adding more or less sulfite.
Has anyone else tried this?
I tried it yesterday. I used the parodinal version that doesn't use potassium bromide. It gave out nicely toned prints on generic paper. I used 1:20 dilution and my usual water bath.
Actually the next stage would be adding hydroquinone. The soup i used didn't use potassium bromide, I'm thniking of using by newest batch whech has about a gram of potassium bromide for every 250 ml. how would this affect the print?
The potassium bromide would work as a restrainer (correct me if I am wrong), while the sodium ascorbate/hydroquinone would make it work, as said earlier, with greater strength.
The prints look nice with a good tone, though it looks like they lack a bit in contrast (so hard to judge from a scan, onscreen!), it works well with the subject matter.
Bromide works with paper as it does with film, but, but changes print color sometimes. It varies more or at least as much from developer to developer as from paper to paper to film etc. It's a matter of different strokes for different folks. Sometimes benzotriazole is called for. Most of us, I think, keep a saturated solution of KBr around so we can add a drop or two as the spirit moves.
Has anyone else tried this?
I tried it yesterday. I used the parodinal version that doesn't use potassium bromide. It gave out nicely toned prints on generic paper. I used 1:20 dilution and my usual water bath.
The question is: Why?
Commercial paper developers are dirt cheap and have so far, at least for me, been easily available.
Sincerely,
Hany.
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