No need to pay for them. My pharmacy will give empty cough syrup bottles away. I've discovered the gallon bottles dont really pour very well though. I think the narrow neck is designed for more viscous fluids like cough syrup.
.T
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I'm a cheap wino so I plenty of them.
Here's my drug of choice.
https://www.traderjoes.com/fearless-flyer/article/2762

Anybody remember Foster Brooks?Yes, and your post shows that it has had an effect on you. [You dropped a verb.]![]()
Go to a store that sells laboratory/medical/pharmaceutical supplies. They have every possible bottle/jug/container you will need, either clear or dark... I was planning to buy them on-line in a specialized photography store , but the shipping to Taiwan is quite expensive...
The enemy of developers and other phytochemicals are UV light and oxygen. Brown bottles block UV. Falcon years ago and collapsable photo containers to address both oxygen and UV. What I've been using are used collapsable wine boxes with the bladder. Wine is similar to photo chems because air and light can have adverse affects. I've been using them for years for developers. I'm a cheap wino so I plenty of them.
Here's my drug of choice.
https://www.traderjoes.com/fearless-flyer/article/2762
The idea is to let the bags collapse during emptying so that there does not build up additional air volume on top of the fluid.
And in contrast to those stiff plastic bellows containters the metal coating of the wine bellows yields lesser gas permeability.
The wine bags come in two different versions.
One version - made out of thin, metallic looking mylar - is excellent for this application, as it is relatively impermeable to oxygen.
That version used to be common, but is now harder to find.
The other version - made out of a translucent plastic material - is not nearly as impermeable to oxygen, and therefore isn't as well suited to this application.
All the wine bags I see around here have transitioned to the latter material.
Even the translucent plastic ones probably offer some benefits, but I would be careful with developers that have been stored in them.
I've stored XTOL which I use for replenishment for over a year it it seems fine. The bag collapses as the developer is dispensed.Once the seal on the tap is cracked, do these wine bags continue to preserve developer for an extended period of time? I would love to be able to mix up my 6.5 litres of c-41 developer, store in wine bags in a box, and access exactly what I need every time I go to develop, with the added security that my developer will store for a long time (6-12 months, ideally).
Please quote your source. Why would more transparent to light mean more permeable to atmospheric gases? The permeability of polymers ranges over five (at least) orders of magnitude.The other version - made out of a translucent plastic material - is not nearly as impermeable to oxygen, and therefore isn't as well suited to this application.
A polymer may contain added barrier substances (pigments) that reduce as well permeability as light transmission.Why would more transparent to light mean more permeable to atmospheric gases?
It doesn't.Why would more transparent to light mean more permeable to atmospheric gases?

I store the stock solutions in JOBO plastic bottles and alike. When stored for more than a year, bottles with Ilford Bromophen stock leak (the color of the solution changes too, it is very dark). I guess this may be due to increased pH.I use the carbonated drinks' bottles (PET) extensively. I've used them for anything, from fixer (pH 5,5), typical bw developers (pH 8-9), stock Dektol, to E6 colour developer (pH ~12) and even 10% NaOH solution (pH > 14). For the last one I stored the bottle in another container, for added safety. Within 4 months the bottle had cracked and leaked some solution. In every other case, the bottles performed very well.
You mean they actually leak fluid out of the bottle? This sounds strange. I don't know the pH of stock bromophen, but I assume it's below 11, not excessively alkaline like sodium hydroxide solutions.I store the stock solutions in JOBO plastic bottles and alike. When stored for more than a year, bottles with Ilford Bromophen stock leak (the color of the solution changes too, it is very dark). I guess this may be due to increased pH.
Yes, I noticed the bottle stuck to hardboard with dark taint on the bottom. Strange indeed.You mean they actually leak fluid out of the bottle? This sounds strange. I don't know the pH of stock bromophen, but I assume it's below 11, not excessively alkaline like sodium hydroxide solutions.
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