Back to Divided (2 bath) Developers...
Yesterday I decided to revisit Karl Matthias's divided
2B-1 developer — with 2 developing agents in it: Hydroquinone and Phenidone. In pervious tests with 2B-1, I found it too active for my liking (still developed highlights more than I wanted) so yesterday I tweaked the recipe a bit by decreasing the amount of of Hydroquinone from 8 grams per liter, to 5 grams per liter and reduced the Phenidone from 2.5 grams per liter to just 2. I kept the 4.5 + 4.5 minutes development time, and my agitation protocol was 30 seconds in bath A to start, and then four inversions per minute to completion. In bath B I agitated for the first 10 seconds and then two slow inversions per minute afterwards.
My assessment is that the decrease of the amount of developing agents resulted in a more balanced negative, with less development of the highest values without decreasing the overall density of the negatives. FP4+ gave me good negs at 100 ASA but I preferred the negs that received at least 1/2 stop more exposure in the case of my test subject (very deep shadows). FP4+ behaved beautifully in this developer and gave me a brand range of subtle/tactile values with excellent tonal separation. Sharpness and acutance is very good and grain characteristics are typical for FP4+: smooth and moderate.
Example image here. Second example
here.
I also exposed a roll of Adox CHS 100 II (at 50 ASA) and developed it exactly the same, and the results were also quite nice, but the Adox film still leans toward excess contrast IMO. Perhaps shortening the time in the first bath would help with that, I don't know. I still found CHS 100 II had to have at least one stop more exposure than its ASA rating suggests, but it did better in this modified 2B-1 than in some other developers.
Example image here.