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Suggestions for a local source for ascorbic acid?

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jstraw

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I just got my Artcraft order and realized I forgot to order my ascorbic acid. What sort of vendors might I check with locally for it? Can I just grind up vitamin c tablets or are they adulterated with things I'd want to avoid?
 
I just got my Artcraft order and realized I forgot to order my ascorbic acid. What sort of vendors might I check with locally for it? Can I just grind up vitamin c tablets or are they adulterated with things I'd want to avoid?

I found it at a good price at a local vitamin store. Pretty expensive at General Nutrition.

Seven dollars for, uh, um, a half pound?
 
Health food stores, probably...but you might also check with your local drug store/pharmastist.

Vaughn
 
There are many kinds of Vit. C. I would do a thorough search hear before grinding up Vit. C tablets. Pat Gainer is a frequent user of "Vit. C" devs and can tell you more than I can, and while those tablets that you swallow for your health may "work", you may not be devving your film to its greatest potential.
 
I just got my Artcraft order and realized I forgot to order my ascorbic acid. What sort of vendors might I check with locally for it? Can I just grind up vitamin c tablets or are they adulterated with things I'd want to avoid?

Now Foods http://www.nowfoods.com 100% USP ascorbic acid powder. About $12 for 1lb, $25/3lb, search on Amazon. The company has wide retail distribution, but not all stores may carry it.

Tablets will contain a whole lot of other stuff. The other stuff may or may not get in the way: at a minimum figure cellulose, gums, sugars, starches, talc, silicon and or titanium oxide, glycol, coloring, and eye of newt.
 
Thanks, I'll call the pharmacy, the health food store and GNC.
 
That's about it. You can add www.chemistrystore.com to your list of reliable and quick suppliers of most things we use. If erythorbic acid is cheaper, you can use it in place of ascorbic in developers, but not as vitamin. It is d-ascorbic axid, the mirror image (isomer) of the vitamin l-ascorbic acid. Kodak uses it in XTOL. Also called Isoascorbic acid.
 
Try the food aisles of your local grocery store or supermarket. Vitamin C is used for baking bread and for bottling and preserving. Here it is sold both with the flour-and-bakery goods, and among the packets of spices and bicarb.
 
While you can use Vit. C for developing, it may leave a precipitate. This leads me to believe that by not dissolving completely, your dev isn't as efficient as it could be.

Go with Pat Gainer's suggestions.
 
While you can use Vit. C for developing, it may leave a precipitate. This leads me to believe that by not dissolving completely, your dev isn't as efficient as it could be.

Go with Pat Gainer's suggestions.

You will probably be ok with Vitamin C powder as long as it specifies ascorbic acid. Dehydroascorbic acid is also Vitamin C to the body but is not the form we want. The pills that say they contain ascorbic acid have binder, probably starch. Whatever it is does not seem to interfere with the chemical effects but might leave precipitates. Even if they are not harmful, they are not desirable. Anthing like that gives me the feeling that it might be a sign that something is in my developer that I don't want to be there. Call it paranoia or just being cautious.

Technical grade ascorbic acid or its isomer erythorbic acid are equivalent for photo use.
 
I found pure crystaline ascorbic acid at a health food store. I think it was ~$10 for a half pound jar. Leaves no precipitate.
 
Well, I found pure crystalline ascorbic acid at a health food store too but from there on, it's been a disaster. I've ruined a good quantity of TEA trying to dissolve the darned stuff. When I worked from a kit from Artcraft for my 510 Pyro it went smooth as can be. Now all I have is two quantities of TEA with ascorbic gunk at the bottom and no idea what to do now. Any suggestions?
 
I just got my Artcraft order and realized I forgot to order my ascorbic acid. What sort of vendors might I check with locally for it? Can I just grind up vitamin c tablets or are they adulterated with things I'd want to avoid?

If you have a Trader Joe's store near you, they sell Ascorbic Acid for $9.99 a pound. It can be found in the vitamin section.

Mike
 
Well, I found pure crystalline ascorbic acid at a health food store too but from there on, it's been a disaster. I've ruined a good quantity of TEA trying to dissolve the darned stuff. When I worked from a kit from Artcraft for my 510 Pyro it went smooth as can be. Now all I have is two quantities of TEA with ascorbic gunk at the bottom and no idea what to do now. Any suggestions?

Taste the crysrals. It might be sodium ascorbate, which is near neutral pH. If it's the acid, your tongue will know. If it's the ascorbate, forget trying to dissolve it in either glycol or TEA.

What brand name is on the Vitamin C? At some places you can get the acid or the sodium salt or the calcium salt.
 
It's ascorbic acid. I don't know what the issue is but that's not it.
 
Let's go to the beginning. What was your recipe?
Where did you get the TEA, and what grade is it?
Did you warm the TEA?
Do you think most, some or hardly any of the ascorbic acid dissolved?
Did you try making a working solution from the clear part of what you got and running a snip test to see if it developed?

Contrast vs C/P ratio at constant development time changes very little for C/P > 40. Thus, if you can dissolve 1 gram of phenidone and 40 grams or more of ascorbic acid in TEA, you should be able to find a dilution of that solution that will develop your film in a reasonable time.

Another solution is PC dissolved in propylene glycol, used as A, and TEA or almost any other alkali as B in a 2-part developer.
 
Let's go to the beginning. What was your recipe?

The recipe published in the articles section here.

Where did you get the TEA, and what grade is it?

It's whatever Artcraft sells.


Did you warm the TEA?

Yes

Do you think most, some or hardly any of the ascorbic acid dissolved?

Some.

Did you try making a working solution from the clear part of what you got and running a snip test to see if it developed?

When the ascorbic acid refused to go into solution, I decided not to waste any pyrogallol or phenidone.

Contrast vs C/P ratio at constant development time changes very little for C/P > 40. Thus, if you can dissolve 1 gram of phenidone and 40 grams or more of ascorbic acid in TEA, you should be able to find a dilution of that solution that will develop your film in a reasonable time.

I'm unfamiliar with the term "C/P." I already have working times for 510-Pyro...if I could just make some.

Another solution is PC dissolved in propylene glycol, used as A, and TEA or almost any other alkali as B in a 2-part developer.

Using an alternative staining developer (one that I can buy...hello Photographer's Formulary!) and abandoning 510-Pyro is probably just around the corner.
 
I guess I screwed up. I thought you were trying to make PC-TEA from the discussion. If you want the pyrogallol color, you can follow the instructions for Pyrocat MC but use 2/3 the amount of pyrogallol in place of the catechol and use TEA for all the solvent instead of glycol. You will not approach the solubility limit of ascorbic acid in TEA. If you want the flexibility of a 2-solution developer, make Pyrocat MC with 2/3 the amount of pyrogallol in place of the catechol and use any B solution you want to try.
 
I like 510-Pyro. I'm sure there are other staining developers I'd like as well or better. That's not really important at the moment, as I don't know why I seem to be incapable of dissolving 5g of ascorbic acid in 75ml of TEA. In any case, I'm not really inclined to change horses right now. If I were it would be because I'm flummoxed by mixing my own developers and would switch to something that came already mixed. If anyone has any idea why I'm failing to dissolve the ascorbic acid, I'd welcome advice.
 
I agree, 5 g of ascorbic acid should dissolve easily in 75 ml of TEA or propylene glycol or even glycerol. I guess you could find out if the problem is in the ascorbic acid by trying to dissolve it in glycerol from the drug store. Warm it as you would the TEA because it also is quite viscous.
 
Thanks, Pat. I might give that a try but frankly I'm so frustrated that I'm thinking of spending my energy on doing film speed and dev time tests with Pyrocat MC from PF.

Or maybe I could contact Mike Barger since he's a 510 guy and local to me.
 
I think you will find the Pyrocat MC quite good. At first, it may seem that the stain is not there, but that is because there is little overall stain.
 
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