I got nice results using Dektol with Agfa ST8 sound film. Nicky
Envoyé à partir de mon smartphone Sony Xperia™
Scott Dorsey a écrit
Dektol is a very, very fast-working developer and very grainy. It is
intended for paper and print materials, not for film. It may be possible
to use
Yes, ST8 will run nicely in dektol, it is intended to run in print
chemistry.
--scott
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EXCELLENT results tonight thanks to all you comrades. I only have one roll
of Tri X in my fridge, which I will shoot and develop tomorrow. I do have
some 2x and 4x rolls left though... Can I process those (as negative
obviously) in Dektol?
all the best,
Mark Street
www.markstreetfilms.com
On
Hi Roger,
Wonder if you have any experience using Dektol rather than D-76? Am about
to jump in as soon as it gets dark here in Brooklyn tonight, and I bought
Dektol
all the best,
Mark Street
www.markstreetfilms.com
On Mon, Jul 27, 2015 at 6:14 PM, Roger D. Wilson rogerdwil...@sympatico.ca
On Jul 31, 2015, at 2:12 PM, Mark Street mstreet...@gmail.com wrote:
Wonder if you have any experience using Dektol rather than D-76?
It will be much more contrasty.
Jeff Kreines
Kinetta
j...@kinetta.com
kinetta.com
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Dektol is a very, very fast-working developer and very grainy. It is
intended for paper and print materials, not for film. It may be possible
to use very diluted dektol but you will have to do some testing on short
lengths, and the results will tend to be inconsistent because of the short
times.
Hey Mark! I've used Dektol with 3378, I like the look but have not used it with
tri x. With the 3378 I only process in pail for about 2.5 minutes. Do a very
short test of film, I suspect 3 mins at max for Dektol.
Good luck!
Sent from Outlook
_
From: Mark Street
Thanks so much, Roger. This is excellent.
all the best,
Mark Street
On Mon, Jul 27, 2015 at 6:14 PM, Roger D. Wilson rogerdwil...@sympatico.ca
wrote:
This may help you out Mark, it's a post from my blog.
Hand Processing 16mm black and white film
Materials for processing film as
ooops forgot to change the subject heading on this
Hey Party Animals,
I plan on processing some 16mm Tri X reversal (as negative) in a bucket in
my basement next week. Haven't done this in years. Can someone point me
to a fairly current guide to how to do so? Of course, I realize it'll be
This may help you out Mark, it's a post from my blog.
Hand Processing 16mm black and white filmMaterials for processing film as
negative:
Kodak D-76 Developer (powder)Kodak Rapid Fixer with Hardener (do not mix in
hardener if you plan to tint and tone film)2 - 4 litre photographic chemical
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