Replenished developing systems

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Photo Engineer

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Well, that is using the sulfite at high levels for the same reason as in other formulas. I was thinking of low sulfite developers which could be speeded up a tad with no significant sulfite (solvent) effect.

Also, "H" acid and "J" acid are often used in these formulas as "colorless" couplers that dissolve in water and speed reaction rate.

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Ian Grant

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Now your testing me, and as all my reference books with Colour processing are in the UK I give up on "H" acid and "J" acid.

I had an idea but lets take it off public view, PM sent Ron.

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I did a search on H acid and came up with - Encyclopedia Brittanica. They have several paragraphs on this "coupler" being used in the dye industry.

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Ian Grant

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and in Hair dyes, as are colour couplers :rolleyes:

It might be far cheaper to buy a C41 or E6 kit and wash your hair in the Colour developer of course adding the right colour coupler.

You could go back to Kodak management and suggest a new Division - Kodak Kodachrome Polychromatic Hair Coloring :smile:

Very easy to market, Microsoft used his wife to launch Windows 95, and Paul Simon is the right target age, plus he already has the Kodachrome song in his back catalogue . . . .

And then "Remember those Kodak moments of your youth, with Kodak Kodachrome Polychromatic Hair Coloring you can look & feel as young again"

Joking apart it's the same technology.

Ian
 

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Agfa patened "white couplers" for this same purpose in films, but not hair. I suppose it would work though. Most of these form green or cyan dyes.

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Ian Grant

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It doesn't form a red dye with PPD & derivatives.

No idea, my hair is naturally di.....s.....a p e a .r ing so not a lot left to try Phenidone on & I have better uses for Phenidone.

Ian
 

Larry Bullis

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Thanks. It's looking like maybe something else may be in order.

How about leaving out the TSP altogether, make a stock solution of Catechin and PPD with a larger amount of sulphite and activate it before use with a shot of acetone?

My issue with the replenishment isn't so much that I want to keep the mix alive, I just don't want to be mixing all the time, especially if traveling (I develop film in my truck camper). If I could make a concentrated enough stock, that would be preferable. I know that it might be pretty hard to get enough ppd into solution to allow a concentrated stock, though.

Or how about packets of premeasured dry chemicals, to mix as needed? That could work.

It probably seems like an odd choice to begin with. I like the scale and the texture, and I still have about 100' of Kodak's Aerial 70mm version of the BW infrared to use up.
 
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