
- PHOTOFLOW RINSE AFTER ILFORD RAPIDFIX HOW TO
- PHOTOFLOW RINSE AFTER ILFORD RAPIDFIX ISO
- PHOTOFLOW RINSE AFTER ILFORD RAPIDFIX PLUS
However, Jim, your hard water will actually be helpful when it comes to effectively washing the fix out of your film. I second your recommendation to use it for mixing the developer and fix. I’m also glad you brought up using distilled water. It’s been on the shelves of camera shops longer than any other developer available today. That’s why it’s still around roughly 130 years later. But as long as Jim is consistent with his method of developing, then his results should be consistent as well. I’m glad you brought this up, however, because it’s definitely something Jim will want to keep in mind as he gets started.

With one-shot solutions, that is a pretty significant time difference. So it doesn’t surprise me that you got different results with the stuff that had been sitting for thirty minutes versus the mix that only sat for five. Some lose it faster than others, but nearly all dilute developer solutions begin to degrade rather quickly once mixed, especially if they’re in an open container (oxygen is their worst enemy). I changed studios twice, and places where I had my darkroom three times, and every time I changed, I had significant differences on the processing energy of the developer based on the water out of the tap! I called Kodak, and they said I had to mix every thing with distilled! They said that the local water companies put different stuff in the water to get it to the specs they need it to be, and the parts per million vary based on the day they do it, and your distance from the water plant! You could have knocked me over with a feather! Once I changed to distilled, everything was density perfect…always! You have to mix D-76 warm, and I even bought my own little teapot just to heat distilled water for chem mixing only!Īs with a lot of highly dilute one-shot developers, they have to be used very nearly immediately after being mixed, or they begin to lose their activity. Mix all chemistry in distilled water…always…! They sell 2.5 gallon distilled water jugs at the grocery store.
PHOTOFLOW RINSE AFTER ILFORD RAPIDFIX HOW TO
I was also surprised that B&H will not ship Kodak Rapid fix with hardener, nor indicator stop bath! Freestyle still will! Just started pricing this out again because “old style” processing and proofing is getting impossible to buy, at least without “scans”, or very likely you’ll get scratched negs back from poor handling! It’s tough to find “real” processing professionals that have an attention to detail anymore (and who actually wear white cotton gloves when handling your negs, and know how to make a prefect contact). I’m excited! I had a custom darkroom in my studios for years, and just recently priced all the chemicals out at Freestyle (wow, was I surprised at the cost now!).
PHOTOFLOW RINSE AFTER ILFORD RAPIDFIX PLUS
Currently chilling in the garage fridge are three rolls of Kosmo Foto Mono (which is Fomapan 100 in disguise), one roll of Ilford Pan-F Plus 50, and as a special added bonus three rolls of Kodak Verichrome Pan, expired since the 1980s.
PHOTOFLOW RINSE AFTER ILFORD RAPIDFIX ISO
I hear the grain is best managed with slower films, under 400 ISO, so I’ll shoot primarily ISO 100-ish films, at least at first. But because of ease and long storage it’s where I’m going to start.


That high-grain look doesn’t please everyone. It’s also a high-acutance developer, which means it will deliver strong sharpness with the tradeoff of enhanced grain. It’s a classic developer, patented in 1891. That made Rodinal, also known as R09, my choice. I also wanted a developer that keeps for years and years, as I won’t shoot in high volumes. That led me to one-shot developers, meaning I’d mix up enough for one roll, use it, and then throw it away. Each yields different results.īased on their advice I saw that I wanted to simplify things as much as I could. Each has different storage requirements and means of mixing and diluting to the right concentration. I corresponded with Peter, as well as with readers Pate and Mike, about which developer to use.
