Tylenol? Rodinal?
Regards
Marty
Acetaminophen can be converted to paracetamol then make rodinal as usual..
http://www.apug.org/forums/viewpost.php?p=218406
Well, I'll be......learned something new! Thanks.
Regards
Marty
Sorry for the delay... I'm an irregular forum visitor.
FTk-20P is a medium (= normal) contrast blue-sensitive graphic arts film used for making positive copies of continuous tone negatives. "FT" is for "phototechnical" (= graphic arts); the first digit (or two digits for lith films like FT-101P) is the recommended gamma (those films were to be processed in fast developers similar to Dectol so the recommended gamma was pretty close to gamma max. Actually, this film is far less contrasty then many normal camera films like PanF+ or TMX); the last digit (0) means it's blue sensitive (ortho films were marked with a "1", and pan films with a "2"), and the last letter "P" means the PET base.
The film was produced in 1988 or 1989 and expired in July, 1990. It was ISO 12 when new. (Naturally, blue-sensitive emulsions are much less fast in tungsten than in daylight.)
No this is not produced any more. Of some 30 films of the "FT" line, only the high contrast orthochromatic FT-41P is still available. See http://www.tasma.ru/en (they also make X-ray and some other special-purpose films).
Ridax,
thanks for this informations.
I never heard before about this special digits!
Cheers,
Ritchie
c&c always welcome!
"The world just does not fit conveniently into the format of a 35mm camera." (W. Eugene Smith)
http://peter-yeti.jimdo.com
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