TheGreatGasMaskMan
Member
PT. 1:
HP5, Rodinal 1:6, 1 min, 45 s. 68ºF, Petri 7s
(The perils of shooting at f 1.8...)^
HP5, Rodinal 1:6, 1 min, 45 s. 68ºF, Petri 7s
I got the notification for this, misread it, and thought you developed for 7 secondsHp5, Rodinal 1:3, 1 min, 68º F, Petri 7s.

Strange that no one has mentioned caffenol as a developer. Use the formula for slow films on a high speed film e.g. 400 or greater. The Arista/Fomapan films work for this.
Edit note: Curse you autocorrect!
Rodinal 1:3! That's nuts. Great pictures.
Actually if the same size prints looked similar on a darkroom print I'd say that Rodinal 1+3 looks OK but I do wonder what, if any, improvement there is on 1+25/50

I'm loving the grain that you are getting with STRONG Rodinal dilutions, GasMaskMan.
I have a nearly full bottle of Rodinal that I didn't really get on with at it's usual dilutions, so I might just use it up on one or two 35mm films at your low dilutions.
Interestingly, to try and get some grain before, I tried a roll of HP5+ in Ilford MG developer, at 1+9 (= usual paper strength), and developed for two minutes, and I was quite impressed with how good the negatives came out. They were totally useable for printing with no extra grain. I've kept this in mind for when I need to d+p a film in the minimum time. But your tests have shown me an even faster way!
Terry S
UK
Reticulation gives what appears to be coarse grain. I never had it happen to me but have seen some examples.
Also shooting half-frame gets you more grain.
The most grain I’ve ever had was Super-XX expired from the forties, exposed as low as the meter can go EI 2-4.
There’s a thread where I showed some of these examples.
View attachment 422759
Kodak SO-078 developed in Kalogen 1+50 for 12 minutes.
This isn't quite to the level of some of the photos here, but it's pretty chunky. Definitely seems like a high speed film in Kalogen could be a good candidate. I think I've got a bit of orwo n75 left in the fridge somewhere so maybe I'll give that a try
Frame no.2&3 Coopersville-Marne Railroad. My wife is from Marne and I'm from Coopersville. Marne used to be called Berlin, but they thought it might be a good idea to change the name from Berlin to Marne during the war.
Frame 8&9 are Eastmanville Bayou and 68th Ave. bridge over the Grand River in Eastmanville. I fished the river and the bayou ever since I was a little kid. All the bayous along the Grand River used to be excellent fishing. A very nice area to live and visit.
I use Kalogen developer for both film and paper on occasion and find it to be a good developer and very long lasting. It doesn't seem to be a very good solvent developer, but it works fine for films like Tmax 100 and even Tmy2.
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