anyhuus
Member
I have been using both the Stöeckler two-bath developer, and Barry Thornton's variant of it ("Edge of Darkness"), and come to like the latter very much.
However, I have feeling of beig not entirely in complete control to an automatic process that seems to provide good results, but nevertheless: without my complete control. It works, it provides the results that the litterature says it should, but I am somewhat confused as to how Stöeckler (or any metol-based two-bath developer of similar kind) actually works.
Thornton was chasing sharpness (accutance) in his book "Edge of Darkness". He claimed that regarding filmspeed and development times generally that nominal filmspeed is too high and nominal development times are to long (= loss of shadow detail and too much contrast). His advice was to overexpose by 1 to 1 1/2 stops and underdevelop about 30% less than nominal time, which gives finer grain and better shadow detail etc. This is all fine, and I think I understand the principles. However, although this is a fundamental principle in Thornton's practice, he never says anything about how he underdevelops by 30% with his 2-bath Stöeckler variant. Anchell claims in "Darkroom Cookbook" that with Stöeckler "is it virtually impossible to overdevelop and takes an effort to underdevelop". The alleged reason being that no development takes place i bath A and bath activates the developer carried over from bath A in the emulsion (the theory behind both its compensating effect and it's forgiving nature wrt. time/temperature). James M. Kates describes in his article on www.largeformatphotography.info/twobath how he actually can change contrast with time in bath A, because contrary to what Anchell says there is a certain development going on in bath A.
Now, Ole Tjugen pointed out for me that Stöeckler bath A and the traditional single-bath D-23 are virtually identical (it is 7.5 grams metol in D-23, whilst 5 grams in Stöeckler bath A), and many seem to forget this fact.
My point is: All sources I have seen point to the forgiving nature of Stöeckler with respect to time and temperature. Virtually all films can be developed in 4-5 mins in each bath. Thornton used a Stöckler variant that he modified for sharpness, but says the same thing about time/temperature. Anchell underlines this property further. How could Thornton control development with this two-bath to achieve "overexpose and 30% underdevelopment"? How come that D23 as a single bath developer is identical to bath A of Stöeckler - why does it develop as D23, but not as bath A in Stöeckler? What actually then takes place in bath B?
Is it so that if one uses single-bath D-23, one needs much longer development time than those 4-5 mins in Stöeckler bath A, and that it is a relativley short development time in bath A that requires the use of bath B. (I.e. given time enough one could develop completely in bath A)? If this is so, it points back to my original problem: How did Thornton control development in his two-bath developer?
However, I have feeling of beig not entirely in complete control to an automatic process that seems to provide good results, but nevertheless: without my complete control. It works, it provides the results that the litterature says it should, but I am somewhat confused as to how Stöeckler (or any metol-based two-bath developer of similar kind) actually works.
Thornton was chasing sharpness (accutance) in his book "Edge of Darkness". He claimed that regarding filmspeed and development times generally that nominal filmspeed is too high and nominal development times are to long (= loss of shadow detail and too much contrast). His advice was to overexpose by 1 to 1 1/2 stops and underdevelop about 30% less than nominal time, which gives finer grain and better shadow detail etc. This is all fine, and I think I understand the principles. However, although this is a fundamental principle in Thornton's practice, he never says anything about how he underdevelops by 30% with his 2-bath Stöeckler variant. Anchell claims in "Darkroom Cookbook" that with Stöeckler "is it virtually impossible to overdevelop and takes an effort to underdevelop". The alleged reason being that no development takes place i bath A and bath activates the developer carried over from bath A in the emulsion (the theory behind both its compensating effect and it's forgiving nature wrt. time/temperature). James M. Kates describes in his article on www.largeformatphotography.info/twobath how he actually can change contrast with time in bath A, because contrary to what Anchell says there is a certain development going on in bath A.
Now, Ole Tjugen pointed out for me that Stöeckler bath A and the traditional single-bath D-23 are virtually identical (it is 7.5 grams metol in D-23, whilst 5 grams in Stöeckler bath A), and many seem to forget this fact.
My point is: All sources I have seen point to the forgiving nature of Stöeckler with respect to time and temperature. Virtually all films can be developed in 4-5 mins in each bath. Thornton used a Stöckler variant that he modified for sharpness, but says the same thing about time/temperature. Anchell underlines this property further. How could Thornton control development with this two-bath to achieve "overexpose and 30% underdevelopment"? How come that D23 as a single bath developer is identical to bath A of Stöeckler - why does it develop as D23, but not as bath A in Stöeckler? What actually then takes place in bath B?
Is it so that if one uses single-bath D-23, one needs much longer development time than those 4-5 mins in Stöeckler bath A, and that it is a relativley short development time in bath A that requires the use of bath B. (I.e. given time enough one could develop completely in bath A)? If this is so, it points back to my original problem: How did Thornton control development in his two-bath developer?