What works Best? Is one type better for one kind of film them an other?
What works Best? Is one type better for one kind of film them an other?
The answer is that a stain image can never have as fine grain or accutance of an ordinary image. The reason that this is true is that the stain/dye migrates away from the silver halide grain during development. The result is that the apparent size of the grains is increased by the larger dye clouds. The dye cloud also masks fine detail. This can be easily seen with the use of a microscope. Each silver grain is surrounded by a stain halo. This is why staining developers are not recommended for 35mm films.
you are comparing an orange to a beef steak!
go with x-tol, Pyro is bad for your health.
pyro alone is a bad developer
also, i got good results in 35mm with some pyro developers, specially pmk+amidol and a version of abc pyro,
Ian, can you give me some examples of super fine grain staining developers? I'd be curious to know since I'm going through a bit of an experimenting phase right now with some stuff from Formulary and comparing to standard Perceptol, also looking at potential applications to document films etc.
Michael
Codswallop. Never heard so much rubbish before.
By pyro I must assume that you are asking about a staining developer. By "works best" just what do you mean? Finer grain? Xtol is a fine grain developer.
The answer is that a stain image can never have as fine grain or accutance of an ordinary image. The reason that this is true is that the stain/dye migrates away from the silver halide grain during development. The result is that the apparent size of the grains is increased by the larger dye clouds. The dye cloud also masks fine detail. This can be easily seen with the use of a microscope. Each silver grain is surrounded by a stain halo. This is why staining developers are not recommended for 35mm films.
The answer is that a stain image can never have as fine grain or accutance of an ordinary image.
Are pyro based developers suitable for rotary development?
Or would the rotary process wreck the accutance?
Enquiring minds want to know.
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