Thanks for the words of caution - these are much appreciated. Handling cautions are very welcome.
Additionally, I'm always pleased to hear from those suggesting the juice ain't worth the squeeze... as that thought seems under publicized for the most part. As a hybrid analog-to-scant-to-web or inkjet print, I'm after workable negs for that process. I thought I'd read the stain masks some of the grain in the highlight areas... so that while not necessarily (or exclusively) fine grain developers, the end result falls into that category. Understood Pyrocat HD to be at least as fine grained as XTOL. Am I mistaken?
Thanks for the words of caution - these are much appreciated. Handling cautions are very welcome.
Additionally, I'm always pleased to hear from those suggesting the juice ain't worth the squeeze... as that thought seems under publicized for the most part. As a hybrid analog-to-scant-to-web or inkjet print, I'm after workable negs for that process. I thought I'd read the stain masks some of the grain in the highlight areas... so that while not necessarily (or exclusively) fine grain developers, the end result falls into that category. Understood Pyrocat HD to be at least as fine grained as XTOL. Am I mistaken?
So now wanting to crush grain more directly without suffering a huge speed hit, I'm back looking at pyros. Feel I could do so and keep it m-a-n-a-g-a-b-l-y safe by sticking to 1) pre-mixed liquids and if possible, 2) avoiding the hyper thick syrups to enable easy measurement and dilution.
As long as you're not going to drink the stuff and you manage to keep it off of your bare skin for the most part, don't fuss too much about pyro developers. So yeah, what you said in the quoted bit is good thinking and should get you pretty far.
Having said that, I agree with the others that XTOL (or any of its variants) is a decent and even safer alternative especially if you want to optimize speed and grain. Pyro has some kind of magic attached to its reputation; the question is to what extent it really holds up in practice. I've used pyro a lot (mostly Pyrocat and 510 pyro) and while the negatives are certainly nice, I'm no longer a pyro user at the moment because it offered nothing other developers didn't do just as well, or even better. For general purpose B&W development (i.e. negatives for scanning & optical enlargement), I'd be perfectly happy if the only developer left on the planet was some form of XTOL.
Note that I'm not saying this to poop on pyro. I'm OK, you're OK, pyro's OK.
I do find that I don't have to compensate as much in development times using Pyrocat in high contrast lighting.
I see what you mean and that can be considered a strength or a weakness, depending on how you look at it. For my own carbon printing, it's one of the reasons I've moved away from Pyrocat and prefer something that creates a more linear or even upswept curve. It's a matter of taste and subject matter also comes into play, of course.
One question to the OP - plus one follow-up - and this is merely curiosity.
"Why did you choose to label your query as a "Simple" question?
And after you have read the responses, do you still think it a "Simple" question?
Matt: I labeled my query "Simple Question" because these discussions tend to run on, but few spend much time discussing the ergonomics of working with the developer - their pros and cons, the handling tips, the everyday mixing, the "living with X" issues. Analog Andy does in his videos by showing you how he mixes some of these, but not a whole lot more. And I guess I didn't think of these issues as subjective as what you might expect in terms of asking for recommendations of a developer for XYZ uses. Having recently put together an RB67 kit, I'm doing those walk-and-shoot things practicing to get comfortable with the camera and the film-to-soup-to-flickr thing, dropping from 400 to 100 ISO films to see what runs through. Hand held RB is kind of limiting. Better with a monopod. BEST with a tripod. Just like music, practice and finding target-rich locations nearby is half the fun... and if it isn't, then what am I doing? So in trying not to get snookered into the try everything rabbit hole - which I did years ago as a newby, I'm curious to see whether there's a livable pyro or not before giving it a whirl.
Understood.
I always like it when people are optimistic about whether adding something like the word "Simple" could have any effect on the complexity of the answers whatsoever!
So this morning I wrote to John Finch who'd published that his now 3 favorite developers are Barry Thornton's Dixactol Ultra and Prescysol (and EF version) .
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