GarageBoy
Well-known
Just got some neopan 400 to play with before it's gone and was wondering what developer to use for best tonality. I'm using tmax for everything right now




Tonality is a combination of exposure wrt scene brightness and subsequent development.
Most of the developers mentioned will work well.
My favourite is Rodinal which expands the mid tones and compresses the highlights especially at higher dilution's say 1:50 couple that with correct shadow exposure and you'll get nice tonal rendering even with low key subjects.
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The obvious strength of Rodinal is the expansion of mid tones at the expense of a little more grain than say HC110
XTOL maybe

XTOL is my usual developer, do you have some times ? Around ISO800 and 20C (68F) ?
I find the massive dev figures always too short, the few times I trusted them I ended up with underdevelopped negs :bang:
I use Rodinal with Neopan 400. It brings out the mid-tones and thus I shoot it on sunny days. Anyone who says that rodinal depresses midtones in general is developing it too aggressively (however this is exactly what you DO want to do in overcast light).
I like to bring out midtones on my negatives to allow for many different print interpretations. Rodinal does this for me. If I want nice smooth tonality, it can be achieved. If I want high contrast, it can also be achieved with proper filtration. And everything in between is thus also doable.
I use Rodinal with Neopan 400. It brings out the mid-tones and thus I shoot it on sunny days.







XTOL is my usual developer, do you have some times ? Around ISO800 and 20C (68F) ?
I find the massive dev figures always too short, the few times I trusted them I ended up with underdevelopped negs :bang:
There is a world of difference between 120 and 35mm.
Rodinal DOES increase grain, so you won't end up with a clean image with nice tones in 35mm, but a much more gritty shot. (as one can see in the first example, which is 35mm)
Fiona by Photo Utopia, on Flickr