Re: Obsidian Aqua, catechol staining developer
Hello
In a jobo the problem will be oxidation... You will probably have to use higher concentration, slow rotation rate, shorter dev time and more sulfite... Or the base + fog may be too high.
To my mind, there are better alternatives for jobo. But just try !
Re: Obsidian Aqua, catechol staining developer
Quote:
Originally Posted by
mikoyan
Hello
In a jobo the problem will be oxidation... You will probably have to use higher concentration, slow rotation rate, shorter dev time and more sulfite... Or the base + fog may be too high.
To my mind, there are better alternatives for jobo. But just try !
Good point. In an effort to process more film while working on my learning curve, I have brought AO home with 35mm & 120mm tanks. Plan to develop some bulk ISO 400 film. Will start between 5-7 min and see what I get.
Re: Obsidian Aqua, catechol staining developer
Re: Obsidian Aqua, catechol staining developer
Just mixed up a batch of OA, for solution B the formula specifies 200g sodium carbonate (anhy) I have washing soda crystals. According to the darkroom cookbook in the conversions section if the formula specifies sod. carbonate (anhy) And you have sod. carbonate crystal you should multiply the specified amount by 2.7. This gave me 200g sod carbonate (anhy) x 2.7 = 540g of sod carbonate (crystal). So I gradually mixed 540g of the crysttal in room temperature water, it has taken an eternity to get the sod. carbonate into solution. I have been stirring for ages, I then transferred the solution into 2 one liter bottles and did a gentle "Indian Club" workout. My shoulders have loosened up great but my B solution still looks cloudy :-( Is the 462g ever going to fully go into a clear solution or have I got the amount wrong? What should the ph of bath B be? With a simple litmus paper test mine is reading ph11 or more (my papers only read to ph11).
Re: Obsidian Aqua, catechol staining developer
Quote:
Originally Posted by
GoodOldNorm
Just mixed up a batch of OA, for solution B the formula specifies 200g sodium carbonate (anhy) I have washing soda crystals. According to the darkroom cookbook in the conversions section if the formula specifies sod. carbonate (anhy) And you have sod. carbonate crystal you should multiply the specified amount by 2.7. This gave me 200g sod carbonate (anhy) x 2.7 = 540g of sod carbonate (crystal). So I gradually mixed 540g of the crysttal in room temperature water, it has taken an eternity to get the sod. carbonate into solution. I have been stirring for ages, I then transferred the solution into 2 one liter bottles and did a gentle "Indian Club" workout. My shoulders have loosened up great but my B solution still looks cloudy :-( Is the 462g ever going to fully go into a clear solution or have I got the amount wrong? What should the ph of bath B be? With a simple litmus paper test mine is reading ph11 or more (my papers only read to ph11).
Problem solved I had mixed the sod. carbonate with my lime scale contaminated tap water, this caused the milky precipitate. I have now mixed part (b) with laboratory grade sodium carbonate (anhy) with deionised water; it took less than 5 mins of stirring. At least I had a good work out and I did learn not to mix the stock solutions formulas with my hard tap water.
Re: Obsidian Aqua, catechol staining developer
THIN NEGATIVES -I've mixed 2 batches and double checked the recipe I get nothing but thin negatives on my 4 separate tests this weekend. 2 years ago it worked very nice. Everything mixed from powder using the potassium versions, Part A dosed with pipette. Tried from 9-15 minutes at 68 degrees F and only 1 strip of film had a black leader, the others had translucent foggy leaders. With a curves adjustment the negs scanned very high contrast - black, white and only one tone of gray. I don't know if I should try the sodium variants or drop it and go to one of the other staining developers.