phototone
Well-known
I see many posts here inquiring about how this exotic, or that exotic developer works, if it is good, etc., etc.
From my almost 40 years of experience in developing my own, and others b/w film I have a philosophy about learning to develop.
I feel that you should learn to develop your own b/w film with standard, easily available developers, such as Kodak D-76, or Ilfords identical developer ID-11. These are "universal" developers which represent the best compromise in regards full emulsion speed, sharpness and grain structure. Learn this developer, learn how to make excellent negatives with this developer, and then...experiment with other developers and compare the results to D-76/ID-11. In some cases you may get more interesting results with other developers, but....if you have no "standard" to compare it to, how do you really know???
While I have used Rodinal (and keep a bottle around), and pyro and home mixed developers I keep going back to D-76 because it is predictable, dependable, has long shelf-life mixed up, and gives me great results. I use it for b/w films from 8x10 down to 35mm.
Other opinions welcomed.
From my almost 40 years of experience in developing my own, and others b/w film I have a philosophy about learning to develop.
I feel that you should learn to develop your own b/w film with standard, easily available developers, such as Kodak D-76, or Ilfords identical developer ID-11. These are "universal" developers which represent the best compromise in regards full emulsion speed, sharpness and grain structure. Learn this developer, learn how to make excellent negatives with this developer, and then...experiment with other developers and compare the results to D-76/ID-11. In some cases you may get more interesting results with other developers, but....if you have no "standard" to compare it to, how do you really know???
While I have used Rodinal (and keep a bottle around), and pyro and home mixed developers I keep going back to D-76 because it is predictable, dependable, has long shelf-life mixed up, and gives me great results. I use it for b/w films from 8x10 down to 35mm.
Other opinions welcomed.