spystyle
Established
Hello from Maine 
I'm approaching photography backwards, staring with digital and now messing with film.
Now I have a lot of film cameras I'd like to try and I might like to try developing my own B&W.
But going from digital to film is like going from non-toxic to toxic chemicals. I see some companies make non-toxic developing chemicals and I wonder if any of you guys use that?
I wonder if there is a huge cost difference between toxic and non-toxic?
Thank you,
Craig
I'm approaching photography backwards, staring with digital and now messing with film.
Now I have a lot of film cameras I'd like to try and I might like to try developing my own B&W.
But going from digital to film is like going from non-toxic to toxic chemicals. I see some companies make non-toxic developing chemicals and I wonder if any of you guys use that?
I wonder if there is a huge cost difference between toxic and non-toxic?
Thank you,
Craig
Roger Hicks
Veteran
Dear Crag,
The difference is basically marketing. Remember: Oxygen dihydride can be fatal in sufficient quantities.
Very few 'toxic' B+W dev + fix brews would kill you if you drank them, not least because you'd throw up immediately.
And you'd throw up and feel ill after drinking most 'non-toxic' dev or fix brews, too...
Cheers,
R.
The difference is basically marketing. Remember: Oxygen dihydride can be fatal in sufficient quantities.
Very few 'toxic' B+W dev + fix brews would kill you if you drank them, not least because you'd throw up immediately.
And you'd throw up and feel ill after drinking most 'non-toxic' dev or fix brews, too...
Cheers,
R.
Ducky
Well-known
I wonder how the environment feels about home processing?
spystyle
Established
Are the minilabs at the drug stores more environmentally sound than home processing ? I just assumed they used the same chemicals in some automatic way.

Thanks,
Craig
Thanks,
Craig
dfoo
Well-known
I wonder how the environment feels about home processing?
Indifferent. Home cleaning supplies are far more harmful to the environment than the amount of chemicals used in home processing of B&W film.
Morca007
Matt
Are the minilabs at the drug stores more environmentally sound than home processing ? I just assumed they used the same chemicals in some automatic way.
Thanks,
Craig
Those stores get their chemistry properly disposed of by waste services, rather than pouring them down the drain.
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