Juan Valdenebro
Member
I wonder if someone's using Perceptol for box speed and even for mild uprating: a third or two thirds over box speed...
It's known Perceptol is a speed losing developer, but Ilford's official datasheets also give times for box speed for several films: Delta100, PanF50+ and FP4+, and the same for TMX and TMY... At least those five can be decently used at box speed in Perceptol. And there are official Ilford times not only for box speed at 1+3, but at 1+1 and stock too!
I don't use Perceptol for small or absent grain, but for tone and for making grain sharp and organized: HP5+, for instance, has a type of grain I dislike in ID-11/D-76, a mess, but in Perceptol, no matter the used dilution, HP5+ produces beautiful, tight, sharp and equalized grain.
I remember a couple of times I've read it's possible to do slight pushes with Perceptol, and that yet it controls grain and contrast better than ID-11/D-76 because it's a slow working developer. It seems in absence of Hydroquinone, Metol defines a better type of image structure that's visible in prints when we use ISO400 35mm film.
Someone with experience using Perceptol this way?
By now I've seen it works well with HP5+ for soft light at box speed... Soon I'll check EI640.
It's known Perceptol is a speed losing developer, but Ilford's official datasheets also give times for box speed for several films: Delta100, PanF50+ and FP4+, and the same for TMX and TMY... At least those five can be decently used at box speed in Perceptol. And there are official Ilford times not only for box speed at 1+3, but at 1+1 and stock too!
I don't use Perceptol for small or absent grain, but for tone and for making grain sharp and organized: HP5+, for instance, has a type of grain I dislike in ID-11/D-76, a mess, but in Perceptol, no matter the used dilution, HP5+ produces beautiful, tight, sharp and equalized grain.
I remember a couple of times I've read it's possible to do slight pushes with Perceptol, and that yet it controls grain and contrast better than ID-11/D-76 because it's a slow working developer. It seems in absence of Hydroquinone, Metol defines a better type of image structure that's visible in prints when we use ISO400 35mm film.
Someone with experience using Perceptol this way?
By now I've seen it works well with HP5+ for soft light at box speed... Soon I'll check EI640.