Semi-Stand Development - FX55
22:24
14 күн бұрын
Converging Verticals - An Easy Fix!
10:07
Rodinal - Reducing that Grain?
16:53
28 күн бұрын
FX55 Diluted - A Wow Moment!
21:28
FX55 Developer Two-Bath Part 1
17:24
Friday's Tip - Easy Easel Setup
2:54
Finding Inspiration
8:39
3 ай бұрын
Friday Tip - Contact Sheet Viewer
1:56
Keeping Those Prints Sharp!
11:40
4 ай бұрын
Пікірлер
@davegeraghty2187
@davegeraghty2187 18 сағат бұрын
Seems like it might be a waste of water no?
@matta7647
@matta7647 Күн бұрын
Thank you good sir!!
@PeckhamHall
@PeckhamHall 2 күн бұрын
I wonder if watered down tooth paste on a white glove would polish it out. I used this method on a plastic motorcycle head light the once.
@PictorialPlanet
@PictorialPlanet 2 күн бұрын
Ha! I've seen that work on old headlights too! No, don't do that to your negative! It'll scratch it terribly.
@PeckhamHall
@PeckhamHall 2 күн бұрын
Is it 10% reduction of the print exposure in RC paper as well, or is it a different value? I did do film photography and development 30 years ago. I have just bought some 35mm and 6x6 and 6x9 cameras and a 6x6 B&W enlarger, film loaders. Just got to get film, paper and chemicals to get me started now. Nice videos
@PictorialPlanet
@PictorialPlanet 2 күн бұрын
Try 5% first and see how it dries down. Adjust to taste.
@raybeaumont7670
@raybeaumont7670 2 күн бұрын
Hiya John. Thanks for this. I've done similar tests with other developers and now want to play about with the 510Ptro. If I find anything interesting I'll give you a shout. Best wishes from The Rhondda.
@PictorialPlanet
@PictorialPlanet 2 күн бұрын
That sounds great, Ray. I hope you find something interesting that you can report back with. 510. Pyro is a very versatile developer. You're bound to find something.
@bengalimotovlog
@bengalimotovlog 2 күн бұрын
This comment is about BT2B. In one batch I prepared the developer, I missed to correct the sodium metaborate tetrahydrate concentration against the octahydrate in Bath B and used the whole 12 g/L. I have developed a role of Eastman 5222 exposed at 200 iso in both Sunny and overcasted situations . The film came out to be amazing with contrast and the tonal range even a little increase in film speed. Same thing I have observed for foma 200 (exposed at 160) and kentmere 400 (exposed at 400) but double X was the best. Double X developed for 4 min in bath A with initial 30 sec with continuous agitation then 10 sec every minute. In bath B 4 min with first 10 sec (4 inversion) continuous and one inversion every min. Requesting your opinion on this.
@PictorialPlanet
@PictorialPlanet 2 күн бұрын
Sounds like you found a good way to develop your films. Write down what you did so you can repeat it and you'll have yourself your own personal version of Barry Thornton's developer.
@bengalimotovlog
@bengalimotovlog 2 күн бұрын
@@PictorialPlanet I would suggest you to give it a try and make a video on this accidental recipe with your wise technical comments.
@hoggif
@hoggif 3 күн бұрын
You are so spot on, those 3 are what I've tried to make same way every time, including how roughly I do agitation and how many turns I do. Trying out every combination of agitation is impossible so it needs some limiting. I've had repeatable density differences below 0.05 with keeping parameters same. Part of that is due to aging developer and needs adjusting over time. In practice that means every standard contrast image exposed right prints on grade 2. I love that when I try FX55 I have a baseline and may not need to test every parameter myself (although my agitation may differ from yours)
@PictorialPlanet
@PictorialPlanet 3 күн бұрын
Thanks for your comment. We are on the same page.
@arneheeringa96
@arneheeringa96 3 күн бұрын
How about stand development? I did a film with Parodinal 1:100 stand 1 hour and I was amazed by the skies.
@PictorialPlanet
@PictorialPlanet 3 күн бұрын
I tried it but the prints were muddy :(
@arneheeringa96
@arneheeringa96 3 күн бұрын
@@PictorialPlanet Thanks for the info!
@randallstewart1224
@randallstewart1224 4 күн бұрын
I bought one of these new about 40+ years ago. I used it regularly for about 25 years until I invested in a large vertical slot washer. I still use it for smaller prints and small batches. They jet water out at an angle, which will set up a circular water rotation in a wash tray. This seems prints separated. They are quite sensitive to volume of water flow. Too low a flow will not sustain the syphon operation. They have a sweet spot for flow rate, which you just have to find by trial and error.
@teenaoakleyart2700
@teenaoakleyart2700 5 күн бұрын
I just had to comment. I’ve watched several KZbin tutorials about this, and no one else has come even close to explaining it as well as you have. They all miss bits out, assuming that people know a certain amount about developing, eg terms, etc. Thank you so much for this video, I now feel much more confident for when my developing tank arrives. Liked and subscribed 🙏
@PictorialPlanet
@PictorialPlanet 5 күн бұрын
Thanks!
@etusuku8848
@etusuku8848 5 күн бұрын
Hi, I have bought a couple of my most used sizes of measuring cylinders from a laboratory supply store. They are the cheaper versions class B which means the tolerance is +/- 1% i.e +/- 1ml per 100ml. The tolerance is marked on the cylinder in those. I think that should be accurate enough even for diluted Rodinal in a 10ml or 25ml cylinder. Br, Eeli
@etusuku8848
@etusuku8848 5 күн бұрын
Hi, it would be interesting to see this kind of comparison with Xtol. Br, Eeli from Finland
@alexcaligari
@alexcaligari 6 күн бұрын
Potassium metabisulfate will work the same?
@PictorialPlanet
@PictorialPlanet 6 күн бұрын
Sodium metabisulphite (note "phite") 2% solution works well.
@alexcaligari
@alexcaligari 6 күн бұрын
@@PictorialPlanet I wanted to say potassium metabisulphite
@alexcaligari
@alexcaligari 6 күн бұрын
Potassium metabisulphite not sodium metabisulphite, does it work?
@PictorialPlanet
@PictorialPlanet 6 күн бұрын
Yes, no problem. 2%
@alexcaligari
@alexcaligari 5 күн бұрын
@@PictorialPlanet thank you, but it s pretty nasty, I think I will try with citric acid
@Darl-df7rx
@Darl-df7rx 7 күн бұрын
I have a dry mount press that will do 16x20 prints. Works like a champ
@PictorialPlanet
@PictorialPlanet 7 күн бұрын
Whoah... that's a beauty!!
@x_and_e
@x_and_e 8 күн бұрын
Thank you for sharing, so much to learn? I haven't mixed my own developer yet. FX55 will be the one. Have you tried it with Kodak 400TX?
@PictorialPlanet
@PictorialPlanet 8 күн бұрын
You won't go wrong with FX55. I haven't tried it with 400TX but will later in the year :)
@x_and_e
@x_and_e 8 күн бұрын
@@PictorialPlanet Great, will try!
@user-qm8sx8ne8g
@user-qm8sx8ne8g 8 күн бұрын
I had never seen one of these before. Interesting action I learn something every time I look at one of your videos, so thanks for that
@ambientlandscapes
@ambientlandscapes 8 күн бұрын
John, thank you for making such wonderful videos. This developer plus the meticulous testing gave me such a wow moment today pulling my negatives out of the tank.
@PictorialPlanet
@PictorialPlanet 8 күн бұрын
I'm glad you're seeing benefits in this great Crawley developer!
@fbraakman
@fbraakman 8 күн бұрын
I have one and I really like it for preliminary washing, i.e. after the fix, one or 2 prints at a time. But I am not sure how efficiently the wash is when several prints are in the tray. From the design it seems that the water is siphoned off the surface but not as well deeper into the tray. Those holes are just below the water output. If you place the siphon further down then it washes more efficiently, but the water is not as deep, limiting the number of prints that you can place in the tray.
@TheCrimsonFlash
@TheCrimsonFlash 9 күн бұрын
When I was a naive novice printer, I got one of these in an old setup I bought. I didn't know what it was, so I gave it away. Felt terrible when I found out later on. Anyway, I now use a dehypo print washer in my utility sink and it works fantastic for my needs. But I'm always on the lookout for another one of these!
@lynnecollier4414
@lynnecollier4414 9 күн бұрын
Thank you! :)
@ryanflatters6408
@ryanflatters6408 9 күн бұрын
Great device. I managed to find one and mostly figure it out. Nice to see it demonstrated. I’m thinking there must be an optimal depth of tray. If used in a deep tray, would you miss drawing heavy fixer residue from the bottom? When using one, I noticed that it makes a nice horizontal current that goes across the surface of the prints. Thanks for another helpful video.
@Marc-yy9mo
@Marc-yy9mo 9 күн бұрын
I remember using one of these when I helped my father out in the darkroom, over fifty years ago. really well designed equipment. Essential if you are doing a run of 100 prints or more.
@O.Persson
@O.Persson 9 күн бұрын
I do belive deville (french manufacter) still makes a siphone. I'm still on the fence on getting one, as I feel the use up a fair bit of water. I've still only done RC-paper in my darkroom. As i don't have a setup for washing fibre in a proper way. Do you have a sense of how it's for washing multiple papers at once? And how long you need to wash, to remove the fixer?
@PictorialPlanet
@PictorialPlanet 9 күн бұрын
I tend to wash only a couple at a time in the tray and for that it works well is you switch the prints from top to bottom regularly. For optimum water saving and maximum number of prints you can't really beat an archival standup washer but they cost more than I could afford.
@O.Persson
@O.Persson 8 күн бұрын
@@PictorialPlanet as I suspected, but a few prints at a time would probably be sufficient. Have an exhibition coming up in September, so I have a few night in the darkroom to look forward to :) And I figured I would print on fibre this time around. The archival washers are so bloody expensive though. Might just pick up a siphone and try it out. Thanks for the reply and the video!
@PictorialPlanet
@PictorialPlanet 8 күн бұрын
@O.Persson you're welcome and congratulations on your upcoming exhibition!
@O.Persson
@O.Persson 8 күн бұрын
@@PictorialPlanet thanks, I'm one of the organisers. So it's really nothing special, but it will be fun to show some of my own images as well :) Have a great day!
@g-r-a-e-m-e-
@g-r-a-e-m-e- 10 күн бұрын
Have had one for many years, great design.
@gerardodalchielelueiro6818
@gerardodalchielelueiro6818 10 күн бұрын
I have two or three is very usefull
@hoggif
@hoggif 10 күн бұрын
Interesting product, never seen one. It would be more efficient probably with more water dump when siphoning. Now it is not that much different from having water constantly overflow.
@PictorialPlanet
@PictorialPlanet 10 күн бұрын
I guess that's the science it uses. It's rather clever really.
@flyingo
@flyingo 10 күн бұрын
There has to be a way to reduce the amount of water used in the development process. Water is perhaps the one resource everyone takes for granted, but aquifers are dwindling rapidly. I love everything about photography except for the tremendous fresh water use.
@PictorialPlanet
@PictorialPlanet 10 күн бұрын
RC papers wash very quickly. I would recommend those to anyone in a place where water is an issue.
@lynnsaychoate5415
@lynnsaychoate5415 10 күн бұрын
After viewing the video I remembered I have one of those, somewhere? I dug threw a couple of boxes and found 2! Not sure if I'll use 1 and keep 1 for a spare or maybe sell both or one.
@richardjames3022
@richardjames3022 10 күн бұрын
I purchased one in Canada, it was quite expensive then (1980's) many years ago and wouldn't let it go for any money
@sheelios
@sheelios 10 күн бұрын
been looking for one for months! so hard to find near me, and very expensive for shipping online
@AI-Hallucination
@AI-Hallucination 10 күн бұрын
No way I was looking at one of them I am sure you will be able 3d print them? Probably be more expensive 😂
@raymondtan2415
@raymondtan2415 10 күн бұрын
I’m sure some enterprising fellow can design and 3D print one if it’s no longer available.
@hoggif
@hoggif 10 күн бұрын
My thoughts too. I happen to have 3d printers and I immediately thought of how easy one would be to make.
@manuelfarrervelazquez6746
@manuelfarrervelazquez6746 10 күн бұрын
Hello I found these two links with the STL files to build the device www.thingiverse.com/thing:2586963 A syphone for rinsing photo paper in a development tray. www.printables.com/es/model/697876-siphon
@berlinberlin4246
@berlinberlin4246 9 күн бұрын
​@@manuelfarrervelazquez6746 thank you for the find!
@chriscard6544
@chriscard6544 10 күн бұрын
One on ebay
@AI-Hallucination
@AI-Hallucination 10 күн бұрын
Yoh going to start a bidding war 😂
@chriscard6544
@chriscard6544 10 күн бұрын
@@AI-Hallucination ahaha no
@tonyhirst3628
@tonyhirst3628 10 күн бұрын
One on secondhand darkroom.com site without hose, ?29.00.
@tonyhirst3628
@tonyhirst3628 10 күн бұрын
Hello, John. Firstcall Photographic do one from America, Deville they're called, £69.00, though?!
@juliencott3692
@juliencott3692 10 күн бұрын
Thank you for your tutorials, very well explained and great content :)
@PictorialPlanet
@PictorialPlanet 10 күн бұрын
Thanks, Julien!
@dineshdhankhar6751
@dineshdhankhar6751 10 күн бұрын
Thank you for your videos, John. They are amazing. I have an old Kodak tri-x pan film , which expired more than 40 years ago. Developing in D76 (1+2) gets it developed but with a very heavy base fog. Is there any way to eliminate this base fog of such an old film ?
@PictorialPlanet
@PictorialPlanet 10 күн бұрын
Not now it's developed, not that I know of.
@dineshdhankhar6751
@dineshdhankhar6751 8 күн бұрын
@@PictorialPlanet Hi John, fair enough. Very little can be done after it's developed. I do have more of this film in a bulk loader, and was doing some more experiments with it recently. So far, exposing it at iso 6 (down from 400), and developing 1/3rd of the time seems to give decent negatives, though with some lower contrast. I would love to know your thoughts on the same.
@igaluitchannel6644
@igaluitchannel6644 10 күн бұрын
What of the idea of making contact sheets at maximum black?
@PictorialPlanet
@PictorialPlanet 10 күн бұрын
This is better if you want to see highlights as well as shadows.
@igaluitchannel6644
@igaluitchannel6644 10 күн бұрын
@@PictorialPlanet I see. Thank-you.
@danielalexandre4008
@danielalexandre4008 11 күн бұрын
Interesting. I tried semi stand on an old verichrome pan 120 found in a 6x4.5 folding I bought. I had no clue so i shot it at plus 2 ev and developed it in rodinal 1/100 for one hour with initial agitation and again once at 30 minutes. Quite flat but usable and no bromide drag as far as I can tell, but it's easier to see on 35mm because of the holes.
@AI-Hallucination
@AI-Hallucination 11 күн бұрын
Going to have to buy your book thanks again man you a legend I have learnt more of you than I did in my HND 😂
@ackamack101
@ackamack101 11 күн бұрын
I was wondering what you can do with negatives that have drying marks on them? Re-wash them and repeat the process? I also thought your idea of running the hot water in the shower first was a great idea. I have a negative that is particularly important to me and unfortunately it has a lot of drying marks on it that are showing up in the prints, so I must do something with this negative. Thank you again for another great video!
@PictorialPlanet
@PictorialPlanet 11 күн бұрын
I'd wash them again in distilled water.
@AI-Hallucination
@AI-Hallucination 12 күн бұрын
These tutorials are amazing.
@alexanderpedranti6278
@alexanderpedranti6278 12 күн бұрын
Im not sure what im doing wrong but when I use semistand development with 510 pyro on medium format I get dark spots on one side of the film form what I assume is air bubbles? Seems to only occur when I develop on 120 (haven't had problems on 35mm). Am I just not tapping the tank hard enough? Never have this problem with Rodinal stand development either. Only 510 pyro. Any thoughts on how I could fix this?
@PictorialPlanet
@PictorialPlanet 12 күн бұрын
Are the dark spots all along one side or spread across the film randomly?
@alexanderpedranti6278
@alexanderpedranti6278 10 күн бұрын
@@PictorialPlanet It is just on one side. The side at the top of the tank
@PictorialPlanet
@PictorialPlanet 6 күн бұрын
@alexanderpedranti6278 definitely sounds like bubbles being trapped by the reel. Harder tapping might do it, especially after the first few agitation cycles. Make sure you are using enough developer to cover the reel and then some. Try using 600ml if you are presently using 500ml. This adds more pressure to release the bubbles when you tap-tap. Another idea would be to scrub the reel with warm water and a toothbrush, just in case it's contaminated.
@alexanderpedranti6278
@alexanderpedranti6278 6 күн бұрын
@@PictorialPlanet Thank you for the suggestions, I will try that out next time!
@AI-Hallucination
@AI-Hallucination 12 күн бұрын
Thanks John maximum respect
@PictorialPlanet
@PictorialPlanet 12 күн бұрын
🙏
@Austinite333
@Austinite333 12 күн бұрын
Slightly off topic but recent experiments using semi stand development resulted in very noticeable differences. I had purchased 100 ft roll of Kentmere Pan 400 for a general purpose film but the grain was near unacceptable. No developer really made much of a difference until….I used a weak solution of Tmax developer 1-15 @ 21c for 30 minutes and only 3 agitations every 10 minutes. It was like magic turning this film from grainy to non grainy. I tried to speed up the process by dropping to 20 minutes and longer agitation resulting in noticeably increased grain. I appreciate all the good advice John.
@PictorialPlanet
@PictorialPlanet 12 күн бұрын
Very interesting, thanks!
@AI-Hallucination
@AI-Hallucination 12 күн бұрын
Thanks mate
@normusarms
@normusarms 12 күн бұрын
That's very interesting, if FX 55 is "optimised" and does not benefit from reduced development what about Rodinal? It is well known that reducing agitation and diluting Rodinal works. Is Rodinal "optimised " at 1+50 with 3 minute agitation cycles? You now have me thinking about "optimising " developers. 😀
@PictorialPlanet
@PictorialPlanet 12 күн бұрын
Very interesting concept, isn't it? Do you think Rodinal changes with reduced agitation? The grain and acutance? If it does then the balance of developing action changes due to by-products building up or developing agent action changing through exhaustion. But if one has a developer that didn't would that be a more balanced or "optimised' developer? Of course, this stability might not be a desirable property also.
@normusarms
@normusarms 12 күн бұрын
Manufacturers probably aim for dilutions that have a safe margin of error. Diluting developers and using longer intervals between agitating the film in the developer may provide desirable results for some. I guess most people want to use the least amount of effort to gain the outcomes they are satisfied with. Looks like Crawley nailed it with FX55.
@Sosinvestimenti
@Sosinvestimenti 13 күн бұрын
Dear John, Thank you for this great lesson in photographic chemistry. Can you please tell me if I can use in stand mode the Bellini Hydrofen (which replicates the studional)? If yes, at what dilution and time will I develop my film? Best wishes, Edoardo
@PictorialPlanet
@PictorialPlanet 13 күн бұрын
Thanks for your comment, Edoardo. Unfortunately I cannot answer your question because I don't use Hydrophen (or Studional).
@user-qm8sx8ne8g
@user-qm8sx8ne8g 13 күн бұрын
Another well explained video in both the spoken and written form The classroom approach works well in certain instances. Just something that has struck me after seeing several videos from several sources is that I have decided that more contrast has more impact for me so that the print from the reduced agitatíon and increased time actually looked better for me It drew my eye to it more. Only a personal observation on my part as I agree that the reduced agitation per se was not an improvement in terms of what the video was testing
@PictorialPlanet
@PictorialPlanet 13 күн бұрын
That's an interesting observation. Thanks for sharing.
@lehnemaigard9609
@lehnemaigard9609 13 күн бұрын
I really like your videos! What do you think about rotary development? I use it with Xtol 1+1, I like the consistency and that I can move away from it. Would FX55 also be a good option for rotary development?
@PictorialPlanet
@PictorialPlanet 4 күн бұрын
I don't do rotary processing but FX55 should work fine. Reduce development time.
@wmwanderer
@wmwanderer 13 күн бұрын
Hi John! Let me start by saying that I've developed my first roll of film with the help of your great book. I'm excited to keep on developing! I also couldn't help but notice a D700 being photographed today. Any thoughts on it? Cheers!
@PictorialPlanet
@PictorialPlanet 13 күн бұрын
Thanks for buying my book and congratulations on deving your first film. Don't stop now :) The D700 is a legend. Low pixel count and high image quality. For years I used Nikon D800s, D810s, and Canon 5D III for my event work but for personal work I never bettered the D700. The sensor is a gem.