If you want to reduce grain then APX100 and Rodinal are a very poor choice. Try Kodak Tmax-100 developed in Microdol-X if you want to stick to your present camera and conventional films.
I'm interested in reverse processing APX 100 using Rodinal Special. I'd like to do two reversals and thereby dissolve all grain. Is this possible? Which chemicals, times etc for APX 100 in RS? Thank you in advance for your replies.
The reason I want to dissolve all the grain is so that I can enlarge my 35mm to much larger sizes and have clean whites and blacks.
Reversal B&W printing from a B&W transparency will give very much finer grain and great tonalitybut it's rarely if ever done as the controls needed are much more complex. I have seen prints made this way at a lecture back in the 70's by a PhD student who was researching the methodology, his images were stunning.
Ian
Why does the process give finer grain and better tonality? I'd have thought the disadvantages of positive - positive work would come to the fore, or is this what you mean by 'controls needed'?
Tom
Is the paper reversal process comparable to black & white film reversal using a light fogging step, and a Potassium Dichromate / Sulfuric acid bleach? Are there any alternatives to using sulfuric acid?
Tom
The only time I've seen or heard of the use of Reversal processing B&W film & paper to achieve B&W prints was while I was at University in the early 70's.
I saw the results, but the controls needed and the time per print makes it far less practical than conventioanl printing. I'd also like to see a print alongside a conventional print as I suspect that there maybe downsides to the Reversal/Reversal process, like loss of apparent sharpness.
Ian
Ian
(dumb question, but somebody has to ask)
Would it be ok to contact print a BW positive on ortho film and use the normal negative -> positive process afterwards? What will be lost?
It does seem like a very long way around to make a print.
Tom
It was done the other way once, contact print a neg onto Fine Grain Positive. In dfact that's how Hollywood worked/works for B&W albeit with different films.
But if your going to make an inter-neg to print from then why not shoot negatives in the first place....
Ian
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