Would I have to mix it myself?I've used a modified Windisch pyrocatechin (diluted down) with good results. I could find my notes, if you are interested.
Would I be able to walk into costco and just tell them to use it like that?Dear Andrey,
C-41 developer - 10 minutes. It was from an old issue of Photo Techniques. I found it to work very nicely at 8 minutes in a Jobo rotary system.
Neal Wydra
Would I be able to walk into costco and just tell them to use it like that?
Would I have to mix it myself?
I have D76 and HC110. What would happen if I use those two developers? Bad grain? Too high a contrast?
I'd prefer to avoid mixing my own chemicals if possible.
APUG to the rescue!
Dan,How about a very simple glycin based TP film developer?
See www.wynnwhitephoto.com/film.html TP-78. Dan
Dan, Have you ever tried this one?
If so, what were your results? Lee
Thanks Dan. Not doubting White, just wanted to check for any additional experiences outside White's pages, as there aren't technical details there on Contrast Index, tonality, etc. I was looking at and comparing glycin only developer formulae just a couple of days ago, ID-60, D-78, Agfa 8, and TP-78. And I have some Efke/Adox CMS 20 to try out.I dropped TP years ago when the price hit $7 + per roll.
Agfa's APX 25 was $2.25 +/- some little. No glycin at the
time but was just re-introducing myself to the photographic
process. If Wynn says it's good it likely is and with other
current high contrast slow films. Dan
Would I be able to walk into costco and just tell them to use it like that?
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