Hello everyone. I have aquired a 500ml bottle of rollei R09 (rodinal) for free from my friend who is returning a favour, and have researched alot on it. I wouldn't mind the opinions of people on here on that developer, which i intend to use on ilford PAN films, diluted 1 + 75 one-shot (7.5ml to 500ml water), and the rollei RPX ISO 100. I have had good results with ilford microphen, but i find rodinal would be alot cheaper, considering i am only 16, have to be careful with rent and other stuff. The water here is quite hard, and sometimes i have spots on my negatives. (Prints are fine). I have an activated charcoal water filter which will hopefully soften the water enough (I could also do 2 or 3 passes), so it doesn't leave spots on my negatives, what do you guys think? I could use distilled water, but cost is another problem unless i saved up for a distiller. Rodinal seems like a developer you can experiment a lot with. (which is what i like doing). I have become very good at B/W, despite making the mistake to begin using VC paper. (Grade 3 paper I am going to try). If anyone has any suggestions as to other developers i could use for either fine grain or high sharpness, please let me know! Kodak D76 I am also looking into, I am not sure if it is one-shot or not.
Many thanks everyone
Hello,
That's a lot of questions for one single thread. I'll do my best to help you out.
1. Rodinal. My use of Rodinal is to add 'texture' to my prints. It produces a wonderfully sharp grain. That sharp and well defined grain I am somehow able to see 'through' when I view the print, because both the grain and the underlying picture have wonderful acutance (edge sharpness).
2. Hard water. When you hang your film to dry, use a wetting agent, such as Edwal or Sprint. They are inexpensive. I have hard water too, and use an old windscreen wiper (carefully cleaned), and run it along the whole length of the film, on both sides, to remove any excess water and wetting agent. This gives me negatives that are completely free of drying marks, and I also don't get any scratches.
3. Other developers. D76 is a solvent developer, which is the opposite to how Rodinal works. While D76 yields fairly sharp negatives, they are not as sharp as those processed with Rodinal. It does, logically, give somewhat finer grain. D76 is a 'middle of the road' type of developer that does very little wrong, and that is its strength. It never really disappoints, but it isn't absolutely brilliant for anything in particular either. It just does a fine job every time. Rodinal is more specialized in that it gives lower effective film speed (which you can use to your advantage), more grain, sharper grain, and very high acutance.
My main choice for developer is Kodak Xtol. I use it replenished, meaning I have a working solution that I re-use over and over again, and I replenish with a certain amount of fresh Xtol stock with each roll passed through it. It yields negatives that are almost as sharp as Rodinal, gives much finer grain, and better film speed.
There are a thousand answers to this question, about other developer recommendations, and I'm afraid the only way you can figure out if it'll work for you is to try a few of them out.
With all that said, it is good to learn a bullet proof process before you start branching out with changing around your materials too much.
Good luck,
- Thomas