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Thread: Which film developer????

  1. #1

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    Which film developer????

    I'am almost ready to process my first b/w negs. I'll be using Tmax 100 for the foreseeable future (just bought a large batch) but might also gravitate towards the cheaper films from freestyle. I'am trying to decide on a film developer and would like suggestions on what to get and times temps as a starting off point for my own testing. My intention is to scan the negs so no wet paper printing/enlarging is planned.

    What is a good combination with Tmax that will give decent negs that are scannable on a desktop consumer scanner? Note that i plan to use a 8x10 Unidrum and roller base.

    Here are my requirements

    1) Prefer to be a liquid concentrate. I'll be doing this in my small apartment so space is at a premium AND i don't want to mess with powders

    2)Prefer one shot since i will probably loose track of the age of the developer

    3) I'd like good tonal separation and less contrast.

    4) relatively non toxic?

    I've used D76 (1:1) extensively with 35mm and haven't liked it much. Right now i'am looking at HC110, Rodinal (adox rebranded one?) or Tmax developer. I'll be in NYC this weekend and plan to buy one of these from B&H then.

    Would love to hear about any comments or advice

  2. #2

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    Re: Which film developer????

    HC-110 and TMX100 don't play well together; at least they didn't in the late '80s when I tested that combination. In any developer contrast will be controlled by dev time.
    Non-toxic = XTOL; a powder, yes, but it mixes easily and works very well with TMX-100, especially at 1:1 dilution.

  3. #3
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    Re: Which film developer????

    Photographer's Formulary (www.photoformulary.com) makes and sells a developer that meets all of your requirements.

    BW-2 TMAX developer.

    B&H lists it on their website. However, they order it from the Formulary.

    (FYI: B&H is closed until 10 AM Sun.)

  4. #4
    Format Omnivore Brian C. Miller's Avatar
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    Re: Which film developer????

    Kodak TMAX developer (I think) was developed for Tmax film. It is a liquid developer.

    Xtol is easy to use, but you have to mix a large quantity at a time. If you are doing a small quatity of film only once in a while, the developer may expire before it can be used.

    Honestly, I recommend that you buy something cheap, and labeled "one-shot." Ilford Ilfosol works, Rodinal works, Pyro-Metol-Kodalk works, weird things like coffee and drain cleaner work, etc. All of it develops film. Use something that works, experiment a little (limit yourself, no magic bullets!) to find something that works well for you, and just go for it.

  5. #5
    Drew Wiley
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    Re: Which film developer????

    Ordinary D-76 does just fine as a beginner developer for TMax. Just be careful not to
    overexpose the film and blow out the highlights, and develop to a slightly lower contrast than for darkroom printing so the density range won't be too extreme for
    your scanner. For more serious work, I'd recommend TMax RS dev.

  6. #6
    Cordless Bungee Jumper Sirius Glass's Avatar
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    Re: Which film developer????

    XTOL is a powder but it is not hard to mix. Get a white paint bucket from a paint store or large hardware store. Mark the inside with the 0.5 and 1.0 gallon, 3 liter, 4 liter and 5 liter marks. Add hot water to 3 liters [whatever is recommended]. Add the dry chemical slowly and stir until it is all in solution. Add more and repeat the last sentence. When all the chemical is mixed in add water to the appropriate level. Let cool.

    Steve
    Nothing beats a great piece of glass!

    I leave the digital work for the urologists and proctologists.

  7. #7
    Land-Scapegrace Heroique's Avatar
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    Re: Which film developer????

    Quote Originally Posted by Drew Wiley View Post
    For more serious work, I'd recommend TMax RS dev.
    Lately, I’ve been shooting a lot of FP4+ and enjoying it, but TMax-100 + TMax RS has been my favorite film/developer combination for a long time.

    I get silky smoothness, surreal at times – and when that’s the look I want, the slight cost to acutance is an agreeable price to pay. To be sure, the results have spoiled me into not experimenting more often w/ other fine developers, like I should.

    A couple of shots from yester-year:

    Mountain creek:
    Tachi 4x5
    Fuji A 240mm/9
    TMax-100 (in TMax RS)
    Epson 4990/Epson Scan

    Mount Saint Helens:
    Tachi 4x5
    Fuji A 240mm/9
    TMax-100 (in TMax RS)
    Epson 4990/Epson Scan

  8. #8
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    Re: Which film developer????

    Quote Originally Posted by stompyq View Post
    I've used D76 (1:1) extensively with 35mm and haven't liked it much.
    What specifically do you not like about it? That might help narrow the field of alternatives.

  9. #9

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    Re: Which film developer????

    Quote Originally Posted by Mark Sampson View Post
    HC-110 and TMX100 don't play well together; at least they didn't in the late '80s when I tested that combination. In any developer contrast will be controlled by dev time.
    Non-toxic = XTOL; a powder, yes, but it mixes easily and works very well with TMX-100, especially at 1:1 dilution.
    Tmax has gone through some evolutionary changes over the years.

    Hc110 dil. b at 6 minutes is VERY nice.

    Bob

  10. #10

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    Re: Which film developer????

    From the overall quality and relatively "healthy" chemicals standpoint, I would recommend Xtol. Solve the powder in 5 liters water and fill it up in five 1 liter bottles. So you have only one open bottle with air in it at a time and you could take the Xtol stock solution from it and dilute it 1:1 or 1:2 as a one shot developer.

    Why didnīt you like D-76?

    Rodinal will be a good, sharpness oriented developer. You should dilute it higher than 1:50, maybe 1:100 and develop under 22 C to optimize the grain.

    There are some other very good liquid developers, but now I donīt have them in mind. Maybe I post these suggestions later.

    Best,
    Andreas
    Last edited by A49; 10-Sep-2010 at 03:07. Reason: typo

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