I have heard it both ways, that higher dilution (i.e.: 1+50) = higher acutance; and that lower dilution (i.e. 1+25) = higher acutance.
Does anyone know which is correct?
Rodinal at 1:25, especially using Agfa's recommended development times, results in contrasty negatives. One can mistake high contrast for accutance. A properly developed negative using dilutions higher than 1:50 (1:75 and 1:100) produce edge effects enhancing sharpness. The effect is visible but not dramatic. One could argue changing film from Tri-X to FP-4 or T-Max 100 is nearly as effective.
+1 on pstake's reply.
Long development times with high dilutions (a favorite is 1:100, from 20 minutes and up depending on agitation schemes - stand, semi-stand, etc) yield acutance effects.
The smaller the format size, the more they are seen in the print.
You can find more on this forum by searching for "stand" and "semi-stand", many threads gone over the dam.
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