Helen B
Member
Curiosity; a bit of a rambling question...
Simple question: does anyone know of a reason not to use a permanganate reversal bath after a first developer that contains thiocyanate/-ide/sulphocyanate/thiocyanic acid/rhodanide/KSCN/whatever-you-want-to-call-it? There's a good wash inbetween of course.
Back in the thirties the Dufaycolor process (B&W emulsion and chemistry despite the name) did exactly that (thiocyanate followed by permanganate), but I've found no recent reference. Example: Kodak specifically say (publication H24, module 15, page 25) that D-94 (which contains thiocyanate) should not be used as a first developer with R-10, which is a permanganate reversal bath. D-94 was designed for use with R-9, which is a bichromate reversal bath - now unacceptable for environmental reasons. As far as I can tell, it isn't because of the acidity of R-10, because R-9 also had a low pH. Is this one of those blindingly obvious reasons that I miss?
It's just curiosity - there are plenty of good alternatives for the first developer that don't use thiocyanate.
While I'm rambling about reversal processes: I'm also looking at fogging developers as second developers - with or without a reversal exposure (no reason not to do both). Good old T-19 sulphide toner seems to work quite well, giving sharp images with low graininess and lovely tonality (at least to my taste). Next on the list to try is KRST, then my next thought is colour developers (the colour of the film image is not important to me). Any other suggestions? I don't think that I'll be trying FD-70a or FD-72.
Thanks,
Helen B-49
Simple question: does anyone know of a reason not to use a permanganate reversal bath after a first developer that contains thiocyanate/-ide/sulphocyanate/thiocyanic acid/rhodanide/KSCN/whatever-you-want-to-call-it? There's a good wash inbetween of course.
Back in the thirties the Dufaycolor process (B&W emulsion and chemistry despite the name) did exactly that (thiocyanate followed by permanganate), but I've found no recent reference. Example: Kodak specifically say (publication H24, module 15, page 25) that D-94 (which contains thiocyanate) should not be used as a first developer with R-10, which is a permanganate reversal bath. D-94 was designed for use with R-9, which is a bichromate reversal bath - now unacceptable for environmental reasons. As far as I can tell, it isn't because of the acidity of R-10, because R-9 also had a low pH. Is this one of those blindingly obvious reasons that I miss?
It's just curiosity - there are plenty of good alternatives for the first developer that don't use thiocyanate.
While I'm rambling about reversal processes: I'm also looking at fogging developers as second developers - with or without a reversal exposure (no reason not to do both). Good old T-19 sulphide toner seems to work quite well, giving sharp images with low graininess and lovely tonality (at least to my taste). Next on the list to try is KRST, then my next thought is colour developers (the colour of the film image is not important to me). Any other suggestions? I don't think that I'll be trying FD-70a or FD-72.
Thanks,
Helen B-49