This question of "what's a best developer" has been asked here so many times and never once, I've seen a consensus. List usually looks like developer section of Adorama or something.
Indeed. Think about it this way: Every one of those products listed for sale at Adorama (or B&H or Freestyle or whatever) is used by
somebody -- in fact, a
lot of somebodies -- in preference to all the other products. Those that
don't develop a following get discontinued. Given the huge number of developers available, that should tell you that there is no clear-cut "best" developer, even for particular films. (I'm pretty sure there are more commercially available developers than there are films, and this ignores the mix-it-yourself developers.)
I'll echo a question asked by others, Logan: Why aren't you satisfied with your results? If you're seeing inconsistency between rolls (one is overdeveloped and the next is underdeveloped), then it could be better control in your own darkroom would fix the problem, no change in developer required; or maybe you need to learn to better control a factor like temperature or agitation technique. If you're seeing other flaws (scratches, surge marks, etc.), then please describe the problems or post samples; somebody here can probably help you eliminate the problems. If your prints lack a particular look you think they should have, then perhaps you should post some examples, both of your prints and of what you like. Maybe somebody could offer you some tips about how to get the look you want. In some cases the problem could be in making prints (or scanning) rather than in film developing, too; or maybe you need to change the way you shoot (control lighting, say) rather than the way you develop your film.
Although experimenting with different developers can be worthwhile, that should be done once you've mastered the basics. Perhaps you've done so and you really just need an unusual developer to match your vision; but I suspect you're running into some other problem that requires some other type of refinement, in which case experimenting with developers will be a waste of time, at least right now.
Brandon D. said:
It's probably harder to mix and bake a cake than it is to make XTOL stock from powder. Seriously, if you can make Kool-Aid, then you can make XTOL stock.
This is certainly true. If the
only concern about powders is the difficulty of mixing them, I wouldn't worry about it. As others have said, a bucket with appropriate volumes marked out will do the job. The comparison to Kool-Aid is a good one. Baking a cake, even from a mix, is much harder than mixing XTOL (or D-76 or any other commercial powdered developer).
That said, other problems with powder developers have come up in this thread, and sometimes issues like the space they consume (once mixed to stock) or longevity (again, once mixed to stock) are important. Logan will have to decide that for herself. There are certainly good liquid B&W developers, and if you like one of them, then great -- use it.