The funny thing is, Brad, that when you're used to working with a specific film, and you don't think about the alternatives out there, it's easy with any kind or brand.
I don't do anything differently with Tmax 400 than I do with Tri-X. And all I have done is some rudimentary testing with contact prints and full blown prints, and produced three basic processing times and agitation schedules that are applied based on the lighting conditions. I don't even think about what I'm doing when I process film anymore. I just write on the roll whether I need plus, minus, or normal development. Then I gang films that need the same treatment in piles, and grab as many as the tank will hold every time I process. It doesn't take any extra time out of my day.
Ilford FP4+ and HP5+ are amazing films, and if they work for you, then you really don't have a reason to change it up. I like how you focus on making pictures. I do the same.
Yes. I see what you mean. When we form habits we save energy. Hopefully, we habituate ourselves to a process or processes that lead to good results. My process is kinda the same as yours but I am sure that many would judge my method perfectly slovenly.
I have a notebook and I keep notes, or used to, about every sheet and even some rolls of film I expose, process and print. I could never really remember the N+1 and N-1 thing so, I usually just look at the scene and think something like...2:00PM, harsh, bright sun, strong shadows...Over expose and under develop. I'll write that in the notebook.
In the back of the notebook, I have a table of films and developers and times. I have continuously refined the content of that table over the years.
I never could tame TMX but, I love TMY. There is nothing quite like it. I used to shoot it in small format with a B+W 060 (yellow/green) filter and process it in HC-110 (which was the only film developer I used for several years). My notebook has many entries concerning this combination. When I took up large format, I stopped using HC-110 because I could never get it to reliably do what I wanted with continuous rotational agitation.
I switched back to home brew D-76/ID-11 and D-23...and since my notebook doesn't say much about TMY in those developers, I quit using it.
Similarly, my notebook has many entries concerning Tri-X in D-76 and FP4+ in D-76 and D-23. I use D-23 in summer because I find that temperature compensation with D-76 is too much of a crap shoot (read, I don't have good notes on this) and D-23, in my experience, doesn't really require any temperature compensation when used within the temperature range that characterizes ambient summer temps here. Sometimes, in summer, I don't even bother to measure the temp of the developer....it just doesn't matter that much. I mix D-23 the same way I saw my mom do it when I was a kid, using teaspoons and tablespoons and a quart sized kitchen measuring "cup"....it just isn't that critical.
Thanks, Thomas, for your kind reply.
