Donald Qualls
Subscriber
As some here might know, it's been a while since I've been able to get into my darkroom -- one thing and another, not really pandemic related, but just that my spare time keeps evaporating.
It's been even longer since I've mixed developer other than by opening a commercially packed bag or bags and pouring the contents into water. I've had many good results back a few years with home-mixed Parodinal, Caffenol variants, and D-23. One exception, I did mix a single tank quantity of Borax-Accelerated D-23, with added benzotriazole, to develop a roll of Verichrome found in a Vest Pocket Kodak (film surely exposed before 1960) -- but I haven't scratch-mixed developers intended to keep longer than same-weekend since I was pushed out of my old darkroom around 2008.
Today, I started to break that drought; I mixed 250 ml of Parodinal concentrate. I used my newly acquired borosilicate beaker set (the 400 ml was conveniently sized) as a mixing vessel, my new Kitchen Tour coffee brewing scale to weigh the ingredients, and a single serving glass bottle upcycled from an 8-pack of club soda as the storage bottle.
I do need to find a better way to hold chemicals on the scale than coffee filters; the sodium hydroxide likes to stick to the paper (fortunately, loss of a tenth of a gram or so isn't a big deal in Parodinal). I hope, tomorrow, to mix up five liters of EcoPro and maybe get time to mix two liters of D-23 and half a liter of DK-25R.
It's been even longer since I've mixed developer other than by opening a commercially packed bag or bags and pouring the contents into water. I've had many good results back a few years with home-mixed Parodinal, Caffenol variants, and D-23. One exception, I did mix a single tank quantity of Borax-Accelerated D-23, with added benzotriazole, to develop a roll of Verichrome found in a Vest Pocket Kodak (film surely exposed before 1960) -- but I haven't scratch-mixed developers intended to keep longer than same-weekend since I was pushed out of my old darkroom around 2008.
Today, I started to break that drought; I mixed 250 ml of Parodinal concentrate. I used my newly acquired borosilicate beaker set (the 400 ml was conveniently sized) as a mixing vessel, my new Kitchen Tour coffee brewing scale to weigh the ingredients, and a single serving glass bottle upcycled from an 8-pack of club soda as the storage bottle.
I do need to find a better way to hold chemicals on the scale than coffee filters; the sodium hydroxide likes to stick to the paper (fortunately, loss of a tenth of a gram or so isn't a big deal in Parodinal). I hope, tomorrow, to mix up five liters of EcoPro and maybe get time to mix two liters of D-23 and half a liter of DK-25R.