That 110 reel is nice but buying it is going to cost more than buying another
bag of Kodak D-19.Why don't you just have your chemistry in buckets or bottles
and do dunk processing of your test strips? Do it all in the dark and save the
time of loading that tank. Or you can just stuff your film in your 35mm
tank.Since these are tests you don't really have to worry about scratching the
film.
John
________________________________
From: Kevin Timmins <[email protected]>
To: FrameWorks <[email protected]>
Sent: Monday, November 5, 2012 6:19:29 AM
Subject: [Frameworks] D-19 testing
Hi all,
I've pretty much got the conventional D-19 process down now (as taken from the
darkroom cookbook). Now I feel it's time to experiment a little. I want to
shoot one roll of 16mm film with the same subject matter/ lighting/ cam
settings etc.. and then take sections of that film (5ft or so at a time) and
develop them individually using different D-19 combinations.
The problem is I want to develop with very small quantities of D-19. So I want
to develop in standard photographic 35mm paterson tanks and not my massive
lomos (which requires lots of chemistry). As far as I know there are no small
developing tanks to develop 16mm tests. Is there? Does anyone have any
information on how or where I could get my hands on such tester tanks to
develop very short lengths of film well? Or if possible, how to modify a
photographic 35mm developing tank to do some tests in.
All the best
Kevin
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