whoisusingd23what formula andwhat process,please?
Hmm...these questions are suspicious.First, print developers with film. Now this one. Surely you know enough about processing with D23
. I'm curious.
Let D-23 die.
Film developers that don't deliver box rated speed need to offer something extraordinary. D-23 does not.
Let D-23 die.
Film developers that don't deliver box rated speed need to offer something extraordinary. D-23 does not.
Hmm...these questions are suspicious.First, print developers with film. Now this one. Surely you know enough about processing with D23
. I'm curious.
Oh man. I think you need a hug.![]()
i'm just back in the experimrnting mode
Are you allergic to Metol?I'll take a hug as long as the body is free of Metol.

Are you allergic to Metol?
That opens a whole debate about box speed itself.
Many people don't use films at the manufacturers box speed anyway and in fact when Kodak released Tmax films it was with a recommendation in the data sheet to shoot at half box speed for a better tonal range. This was also recommended by John Sexton in his excellent articles on Tmax in the mid 1980's.
I dont like those developers thats why I made my own.Regarding speed, of course this is something individuals need to test for, but in general when it comes to speed and/or shadow contrast I have not found the differences between most general purpose developers to be as great as many suppose them to be. Superfine grain variants such as Perceptol and Microdol are indeed slower if you want to maintain their extra fine grain properties.
Id describe what Ive been using as a cross of DD-X and XTOL. I get DD-X speed with XTOL tonality, with granularity somewhere between.But if we're comparing D23 to D76 for example, the differences are quite small. Even XTOL is not a great deal faster than D76 in my experience. In the end it depends on how you use them, and with which films.
If you are shooting landscape or still life, or shooting in studio, that would be fine, but if you are hand holding small format cameras, doing street photography, or environmental portrait, or something of that nature, extra speed out of medium speed films would be a lot more appreciated.I like good shadow separations, so if I have to rate TMAX 100 at say 50 instead of 64 or 80, I don't really care. I'm interested only in image quality.
I get good karma by rating TMX at 100 when I can get good exposure metering, and have an option to err on the over side when I'm not sure, and always get good shadow details.
I also feel good when I can rate any of the 400 speed films at 400 in a toy camera with fixed focusing distance or other cameras with zone focusing only, or when you don't want to use viewfinder. Why don't I trade in extra speed from the developer to a bit more DOF.
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