re: The dangers of potassium hydroxide and sodium hydroxide
outofoptions said:
Since they sell lye at the local grocery store, I wouldn't be all that concerned. ALL of the formulas I have seen published tell you how to safely handle it. Yes, there is always stern warnings to make sure you respect the potential, but don't let that put you off.
The safety of mixing your own developers is, of course, relative. Something like PC-Glycol is pretty low on the danger scale; just restrain yourself from eating or drinking the ingredients or rubbing them into open wounds and you should be fine. Potassium hydroxide and sodium hydroxide, though, are potentially dangerous if mishandled; they can cause warm water to boil, perhaps spewing chemicals all over the place, and if you get them on bare skin (or worse, in your eyes), they can damage your own tissues. Pyro developers are also potentially risky to mix, but for different reasons. Of course, none of these things is as dangerous as, say, mixing up your own TNT. I expect the average person could mix up Rodinal with little risk of personal injury
if that person reads the instructions carefully and takes appropriate safety precautions, such as using
cold water for mixing the hydroxide and wearing protective gear (safety goggles, gloves resistant to hydroxide, etc.). Nonetheless, the safety issues do bear mentioning because Rodinal creation is high on the danger scale, at least as calibrated for darkroom chemistry.