• Welcome to Photrio!
    Registration is fast and free. Join today to unlock search, see fewer ads, and access all forum features.
    Click here to sign up

Real life differences between developers?

Recent Classifieds

Forum statistics

Threads
201,769
Messages
2,829,844
Members
100,936
Latest member
rdbirt
Recent bookmarks
0

meno

Member
Allowing Ads
Joined
Dec 18, 2017
Messages
2
Location
hamburg
Format
35mm
Hi,

im quite new (~6 months) to developing my own film and printing in the darkroom (I don't scan) so I do not have enough experience to feed this discussion but there is something that is haunting me.

There is a lot of discussion going on about different kinds of films and developers. Strong opinions are being thrown around.
Im trying to make an understanding for myself so I was looking for real scientific-style comparisons of different films and developers. This means, same situation, same image, just changing one variable, the film and/or developer.

The only real comparison I found is this article http://www.fotoimport.no/filmtest/filmTriX.html
They compare different developers on same films and you can also change the film.

To my eye, there is a extrem subtile difference between the developers. Maybe sharpness, maybe grain but to the naked eye, from an artistic point of view, I don' see enough difference. Maybe technically speaking one is cleaner then the other, but just talking about tonality, smoothness of the image, I can not see enough difference to switch developers.

Also everything is contradicting. A lot of sources say D76 should be producing less grain then HC-110 but in the images it looks the other way around. At least to my eye.

Is the test wrong? Are my eyes not good enough to see the differences? Do they even matter if you don;t care about the technical perfect image? Is choosing developer just about grain and sharpness or also about image appeal?

Im totally lost.

Maybe someone can point me to the differences.
Im looking to choose the right developer. I don't care about sharpness and technical perfection. I just want to have nice images with character. Creamy shadows. Hard to find the right developer combination. From this images, HP5 looks much harder then tri-x. On other occasions they look similar.

Best,
 

bernard_L

Member
Allowing Ads
Joined
Feb 17, 2008
Messages
2,132
Format
Multi Format
To my eye, there is a extrem subtile difference between the developers. Maybe sharpness, maybe grain but to the naked eye, from an artistic point of view, I don' see enough difference. Maybe technically speaking one is cleaner then the other, but just talking about tonality, smoothness of the image, I can not see enough difference to switch developers.
So... believe your eyes.
Are my eyes not good enough to see the differences?
No. Your eyes are good enough. You will find so many threads and posts where people claim superiority of this or that on the basis of just one or a few pics made with their favorite combination, without any A/B comparison, even less a double-blind test. And, before the fan-clubs start shouting at me: yes, differences exist; They must exist at some level. But the evidence given to back up claims is most often inadequate.
You mention D-76 and HC-110. There you have two classics. Choose one based practical criteria. With HC-110 you have reproducible results with a concentrate that will keep for years. With D-76, the initial investment (one pack of powder) is less that for HC-110 (1 litre of concentrate); and with proper storage (e.g. wine bladder) you can keep the stock solution longer than the safe (pessimistic) estimate of Kodak (2 months in partly filled bottle).
I don't care about sharpness and technical perfection. I just want to have nice images with character. Creamy shadows.
Probably what is generally called tonality. I agree it's more important than sharpness or grain. Good advice in this post by Doremus Scudder: https://www.photrio.com/forum/threa...pment-time-few-questions.139291/#post-1819459
 

rpavich

Member
Allowing Ads
Joined
Aug 24, 2015
Messages
1,520
Location
West virginia, USA
Format
35mm
Yep...you noticed.
Just find one you like and stick with it.
I have been through a LOT of developers over my short couple of years doing film...thinking the same thing you are but after all that...just realized that it was taking up a lot of time and not accomplishing anything. There are SO many variables that it's just about impossible to nail down differences that mean anything in real life.

Pick one...have fun.
 

rpavich

Member
Allowing Ads
Joined
Aug 24, 2015
Messages
1,520
Location
West virginia, USA
Format
35mm
So... believe your eyes.

No. Your eyes are good enough. You will find so many threads and posts where people claim superiority of this or that on the basis of just one or a few pics made with their favorite combination, without any A/B comparison, even less a double-blind test. And, before the fan-clubs start shouting at me: yes, differences exist; They must exist at some level. But the evidence given to back up claims is most often inadequate.
You mention D-76 and HC-110. There you have two classics. Choose one based practical criteria. With HC-110 you have reproducible results with a concentrate that will keep for years. With D-76, the initial investment (one pack of powder) is less that for HC-110 (1 litre of concentrate); and with proper storage (e.g. wine bladder) you can keep the stock solution longer than the safe (pessimistic) estimate of Kodak (2 months in partly filled bottle).

Probably what is generally called tonality. I agree it's more important than sharpness or grain. Good advice in this post by Doremus Scudder: https://www.photrio.com/forum/threa...pment-time-few-questions.139291/#post-1819459
I'm going to print that and save it every time I feel like messing around with a bunch of test shots and obsessing.
Great post.
 

Gerald C Koch

Member
Allowing Ads
Joined
Jul 12, 2010
Messages
8,131
Location
Southern USA
Format
Multi Format
Somehow you missed one of thos pesky little qualifiers 'slightly.' Whar Kodak stated is this

Compared to D-76, this chart indicates that HC-110 (dilution B) produces:

Slightly less shadow detail or true film speed;
Slightly finer grain;
Slightly lower acutance

Commercial and many that are not will ALL give you excellent results. There are no holy grails. So dont's worry be happy..
 

bvy

Member
Allowing Ads
Joined
Jul 22, 2009
Messages
3,285
Location
Pittsburgh
Format
Multi Format
Welcome to the alchemy. Developer choice isn't always about miniscule differences in grain size. Ease of preparation, keeping properties, agitation preference, storage requirements, etc. will influence people's decision as well. It still has to give you results that please you, but as you observed, a number of developers will likely do that. You also need to pick one that you can work with.
 

georg16nik

Member
Allowing Ads
Joined
Aug 3, 2010
Messages
1,101
Format
Multi Format
...

To my eye, there is a extrem subtile difference between the developers. Maybe sharpness, maybe grain but to the naked eye, from an artistic point of view, I don' see enough difference. Maybe technically speaking one is cleaner then the other, but just talking about tonality, smoothness of the image, I can not see enough difference to switch developers.
...

On fotoimport.no you are observing the hybrid workflow fallacies.

Scanning a neg/pos will give you equalized results with enough digital mockery to call it a wash.

Proper evaluation requires wet printing with decent enlarger and nice set of papers, developers, etc...
 

Cholentpot

Member
Joined
Oct 26, 2015
Messages
7,014
Format
35mm
Most of the standard developers to my eye are more or less the same. It's when you get to the interesting stuff that things can be different.

For instance, D-76, HC-110, and Tmax Dev look just about the same to me. Sure there can and are slight differences but in the end it's more or less the same. Once I start with Rodinal though things look significantly different. It's almost night and day.
 

Craig75

Member
Allowing Ads
Joined
May 9, 2016
Messages
1,234
Location
Uk
Format
35mm
Id have thought its going to depend on the size of the enlargement whether one will see any significant differences.
 

voceumana

Member
Allowing Ads
Joined
Aug 4, 2004
Messages
896
Location
USA (Utah)
Format
Multi Format
Ansel Adams mentions in one of his books that perhaps you shouldn't make too much out of the differences in developers--that's being very frank!

There are slight and subtle differences between developers, but you'll probably see bigger differences based on agitation techniques than between standard developers. There are certain developers that have a characteristic look to them or are good for special purposes; Rodinal is one with a characteristic appearance, and DK-50 is one (not for small formats) that has excellent mid-tone separation for scenes of limited contrast.

So, don't ignore different developer types, but don't fret over them, either.

Recommended reading: Steve Anchell & Bill Troop's Film Developing Cookbook.
 

ic-racer

Member
Joined
Feb 25, 2007
Messages
16,728
Location
USA
Format
Multi Format
I'll save the opinions for others, but physical characteristics of dry and liquid developers have a big influence on ease of processing. Also, developers that require short process times can lead to un-even development. So, I use T-max developer. It has reasonable process times at 24C and it is a long-lasting liquid that can economically be used on-shot.
 
  • Deleted member 2924
  • Deleted

trendland

Member
Allowing Ads
Joined
Mar 16, 2012
Messages
3,398
Format
Medium Format
Id have thought its going to depend on the size of the enlargement whether one will see any significant differences.
Exactly - to standard enlargements there isn't an issue about grain to most developer and most films.The border is 5 x 7 (not bigger than this size everything is the same)And secondly it is the way to find out : correct enlargements in 40 x 60 (cm) will show the characteristics of film/developer/development/exposure/focus in 35mm bw.
BUT THERE IS NO WAY TO COMPARE VIA SCANNING.The right method need a darkroom.Otherwise it is ALLWAYS a test of the scanner and the software.

with regards
 

trendland

Member
Allowing Ads
Joined
Mar 16, 2012
Messages
3,398
Format
Medium Format
Hi,

im quite new (~6 months) to developing my own film and printing in the darkroom (I don't scan) so I do not have enough experience to feed this discussion but there is something that is haunting me.

There is a lot of discussion going on about different kinds of films and developers. Strong opinions are being thrown around.
Im trying to make an understanding for myself so I was looking for real scientific-style comparisons of different films and developers. This means, same situation, same image, just changing one variable, the film and/or developer.

The only real comparison I found is this article http://www.fotoimport.no/filmtest/filmTriX.html
They compare different developers on same films and you can also change the film.

To my eye, there is a extrem subtile difference between the developers. Maybe sharpness, maybe grain but to the naked eye, from an artistic point of view, I don' see enough difference. Maybe technically speaking one is cleaner then the other, but just talking about tonality, smoothness of the image, I can not see enough difference to switch developers.

Also everything is contradicting. A lot of sources say D76 should be producing less grain then HC-110 but in the images it looks the other way around. At least to my eye.

Is the test wrong? Are my eyes not good enough to see the differences? Do they even matter if you don;t care about the technical perfect image? Is choosing developer just about grain and sharpness or also about image appeal?

Im totally lost.

Maybe someone can point me to the differences.
Im looking to choose the right developer. I don't care about sharpness and technical perfection. I just want to have nice images with character. Creamy shadows. Hard to find the right developer combination. From this images, HP5 looks much harder then tri-x. On other occasions they look similar.

Best,

Just try out Rodinal pls. by pushing Ilford HP5 up to E.I.1600 then use Ilford Perceptol and pull Delta 100 with E.I ISO25.
The rest in bw. processing is in the middle.That means you try out the extrema to find the middle of characteristics step by step.In shell live it is the same.
with regards
 

M Carter

Member
Allowing Ads
Joined
Jan 23, 2013
Messages
2,149
Location
Dallas, TX
Format
Medium Format
There's an interesting chapter in "Way Beyond Monochrome" where they test 4 different common developers, same shot, same film. I think it was like Pyro, D76, HC-110, and Rodinal. IIRC, their takeaway was "for all the arguments over this stuff, there's little essential difference, except for Rodinal, which has a look all its own". Personally, every developer I test feels a little ho-hum after getting used to Rodinal. I don't have grain issues with it since I rarely need a film faster than 320 or so. I also very much like the convenience and shelf-life of syrup devs, but that's just me. I do keep HC-110 around for various mask-making tasks.
 

bvy

Member
Allowing Ads
Joined
Jul 22, 2009
Messages
3,285
Location
Pittsburgh
Format
Multi Format
BUT THERE IS NO WAY TO COMPARE VIA SCANNING.The right method need a darkroom.Otherwise it is ALLWAYS a test of the scanner and the software.
You assume everyone using film is printing it in the darkroom. If you only ever scan your film, then you absolutely should pick a developer based on how it scans. Scanner software does make adjustments and corrections, but it doesn't nullify what a particular developer does. To your point, making printing decisions based on how it scans would be backwards.

ETA: Acknowledging that I took your statement out of context, since you were specifically responding to a printing concern.
 
Last edited:

Ko.Fe.

Member
Allowing Ads
Joined
Apr 29, 2014
Messages
3,209
Location
MiltON.ONtario
Format
Digital
I would not use Rodinal for 400 films and 400 pushed films. I'd rather use Lith developer to have super grain instead. :smile:
I prefer HC-110 for printing negatives. Just because it is much more convenient over D-76 and X-TOL. Which I also used before I discovered HC-110.
 

JWMster

Member
Allowing Ads
Joined
Jan 31, 2017
Messages
1,160
Location
Annapolis, MD
Format
Multi Format
As a hybrid guy developing negs and scanning for digital printing (I don't have a darkroom), I would tend to backup agreement that the differences are probably elsewhere. Scanners play a difference and to be fair to some scans I've done and the developers I'm less enthused by, it was probably an issue in my scanning approach that resulted in escalated grain size.

I live BVY's comment on ease of use. I started with DD-X and HC-110, and as many folks who like their keeping properties, I didn't like the handling of HC-110's thick syrupy goop for measurement and always felt I was kind of mis-measuring it. Keeps well. But it's more eyedropper and syringe handling than I like. Yet I went there 'cause I was afraid of powders and mixing soups... until I tried Pyrocat HD... which I liked very much. But I began to worry about the handling a bit n general, read material on safety, and decided I could up my technique and probably get great results with more common powder developers like XTOL, Perceptol, ID-11 and Microphen... maybe even D23 or Divided D23. Nothing fancy. The challenge was laid down.

So I tried mixing up the powders and it was easy. I take precautions, but the only trick is heating the water in the microwave. Otherwise, it couldn't be simpler. And with gloves, an apron and goggles, it's probably safer than the Pyrocat HD. Most of the time I'm using Perceptol, but not exclusively (though it seems like it). What I find with mixing up powders is that this is a LOT easier to mix to working strength than it was to do with HC-110. All I do is measure out in a beaker 500ml of "stuff" and another 500ml of distilled water, give it a good stir and I'm "done". I get to do this at the MACRO level rather than the MICRO level we'd use for HC110. Take the temp.... 'cause the STOCK and the DISTILLED water have been sitting in the same environment always... so this is easy.

The rest is the same: I pour into containers 1000ml of Stopper and 1000ml of Fixer (which gets reused), and pour 2000ml of distilled water with 2 "drops" of Photoflow into a double bucket for Final Rinse. Prep is "done" in 5 minutes. If I need to, I'll start washing off gear like stir sticks and thermometers while the Pre-Rinse runs for 5 minutes and begin clean-up of the previous step's stuff while I'm doing the next. Let my Jobo tank ride the Uniroller, and it's pretty easy.

So I'd say that after 9 months of this... and about the same place I imagine you're at... I've done 70 or 80 rolls, and finally figured these powders ain't worth avoiding. If you go for replenishing, I think it gets even easier. I haven't done that yet, but 1:1 mixes that are recommended for Rotary Agitation are pretty easy and consistent.
 

MattKing

Moderator
Moderator
Joined
Apr 24, 2005
Messages
55,143
Location
Delta, BC Canada
Format
Medium Format
First, welcome to Photrio!
Most common developers will give similar results.
Some of the differences between developers relate to how they perform in high volume commercial environments - most likely not of concern for you.
Other differences relate to practical concerns like capacity, ease of storage, flexibility of dilution, cost and availability - great reasons for making your choice.
Do you have the opportunity to see the real world results that other people achieve in their prints, and to ask those people for advice? If so, than seek out that sort of help, because internet views are rarely as informative as being able to actually see negatives and prints.
If I was as new to this as you are, I would make my decision based on mundane criteria like cost and local availability.
 

NJH

Member
Allowing Ads
Joined
Dec 30, 2013
Messages
702
Location
Dorset
Format
Multi Format
Its interesting that given that so many agree that developer choice makes a very small difference to the end result why so many are using speed loosing developers, and not the state of the art products from the big two Xtol and DD-X.
 

Sirius Glass

Subscriber
Joined
Jan 18, 2007
Messages
50,814
Location
Southern California
Format
Multi Format
I prefer XTOL stock and even better replenished XTOL. The chart below shows the trade offs.

XTOL.PNG
 

Cholentpot

Member
Joined
Oct 26, 2015
Messages
7,014
Format
35mm
You assume everyone using film is printing it in the darkroom. If you only ever scan your film, then you absolutely should pick a developer based on how it scans. Scanner software does make adjustments and corrections, but it doesn't nullify what a particular developer does. To your point, making printing decisions based on how it scans would be backwards.

ETA: Acknowledging that I took your statement out of context, since you were specifically responding to a printing concern.

Gotta say, I scan all of my film and you can see the difference in some developers quite clearly.
 

NJH

Member
Allowing Ads
Joined
Dec 30, 2013
Messages
702
Location
Dorset
Format
Multi Format
You can see it with a grain focuser as well, D76/ID-11 v Rodinal 1:50 for example is very obvious under a 20x grain focuser, much less obvious when looking at a 10x8 print.
 

TonyB65

Member
Allowing Ads
Joined
Dec 13, 2017
Messages
265
Location
Hungerford
Format
Multi Format
I'm in a similar position to you, I've only been developing for a short time, but I am having success now. I don't agree that all developers are very similar, I've tried a few and they all give different results. However I have found one that is definitely superior in terms of versatility and consistently excellent results, pushed or at normal speed, and that's Ilford DD-X, it's also excellent for stand development too, and relatively economical. For me it's head and shoulders above anything else I've tried and I'll be sticking with it. Another tip is to keep liquid developers in 1 litre glass bottles with a standard size neck that will take a wine cork. Then get yourself one of these wine vacuum pumps and some corks. https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Vacu-Vin...212213&hash=item2a4d208029:g:KgMAAOSwZjJU-FaX They're fantastic, you can pump the bottles every time you use them and your chemistry will stay fresh much longer, they're not expensive either, I wouldn't be without this set-up now. Find a developer you like and stick with it, get to know it, but if you haven't tried DD-X you should, it's excellent and very easy to use.
 

destroya

Subscriber
Joined
Jul 23, 2012
Messages
1,235
Location
Willamette Valley, OR
Format
Multi Format
this is why i sometimes shoot color film, just one developer so less to worry about.

years ago i did the mad chemist thing and tried many different developers. there were subtle differences and some showed up on wet prints. but after having it distract me from whats really important, the final image in print, i settled on 2 developers to keep it simple, one for 100 and slower films and one for 400 films. keep it simple
 
Photrio.com contains affiliate links to products. We may receive a commission for purchases made through these links.
To read our full affiliate disclosure statement please click Here.

PHOTRIO PARTNERS EQUALLY FUNDING OUR COMMUNITY:



Ilford ADOX Freestyle Photographic Stearman Press Weldon Color Lab Blue Moon Camera & Machine
Top Bottom