"PMK Workshop Report
I had the great opportunity of attending Gordon Hutchings' Pyro Workshop at Photographers' Formulary in Montana. All I can say is if you ever get the chance - DO IT!
Gordon is a wonderful teacher. I learned so much! Not just on Pyro, but on printing, exposure, filter, photographic seeing, etc. He had on lecture (on photographic seeing) that was worth the entire workshop for me. I'm totally sold in Pyro now (and I'm changing to his PMK formula). I took one picture of the sun through some trees. We ended up do an extreme enlargement of the sun and you could see branches and leaves across the face of the sun. We laughly called it Zone 100. Pyro is amazing stuff! If you haven't tried it - what are you waiting for. Bergger donated film and paper for it, so we mainly shot that all week. Good stuff, especially the paper (although it was awefully slow stuff - it required double the exposure time + 10% compared to Ilford VC RC paper)
Now for the answers to some of the questions people wanted me to ask.
No, he doesn't have times for the new Tri-X. He mainly shoots Bergger 200 and is in the process of replacing his darkroom (so no opportunity to test).
Yes, changing the dilution ratios A,B, Water is something you can do to adjust contrast. You mainly just change the amount of the A solution (pyro). Its normally 10, 20, 1000 but we played around with using 15, 20, 1000 to add contrast. It was a little too hot for my process and film.
Certain films don't stain very well. Agfa was one of those he mentioned. I guess the new TriX doesn't stain as well as the old. Ilford HP5 stains excellent, but the color can mess with the Saunders VCC enlargers so he recommended we not use that for workshop.
All in all, I highly recommend his workshops. The Formulary's facility is excellent also. Good lodging, great meals, and three large darkrooms.
-- Steve Allen , September 05, 2003; 11:22 P.M. Eastern"
I found this post regarding PMK to be interesting. I found this on Photo.net and the poster goes on to say that Gordon has eliminated the nitrogen burst in his recommedations for rotary processing.
Of particular interest was his comment regarding the effects of PMK stain on the Saunders VC enlargers. This bears out my opinion about the effects of general stain and the particular stain color which is exhibited by PMK.