Interesting. So, what's the name of that developer from the old Kodak
engineer (hope it's not my pants :-)  ?

Jens Bladt
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://hjem.get2net.dk/bladt


-----Oprindelig meddelelse-----
Fra: David Miers [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sendt: 24. april 2004 04:21
Til: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Emne: RE: D76


According to a site that I recently subscribed to T-Max developer and D76
are actually chemically the same even though from what I understand one is a
powder and the other is a liquid.  I'm not at home on my home systems, so I
can't access the info right now, but will post a link tomorrow night if I
remember.  They are also selling a new developer made by a recently laid off
engineer from Kodak in New York that knocks the pants off of most of them.
I can't vouch for this as I've not tried it yet.  Does make interesting
reading though.

-----Original Message-----
From: Paul Stenquist [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, March 17, 2004 7:10 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: D76


ditto. And I got my best results exposing tmax 400 @200 and developing
it for 11 minutes at 68 degrees F. Got that recipe from a serious BW
fine art photog. It works.
On Mar 17, 2004, at 1:37 PM, Mark Cassino wrote:

> At 11:12 AM 3/17/2004 -0600, you wrote:
>
>> > From: "William Robb" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>> > The only developer that I found worked well with T-Max film is T-Max
>> > developer.
>>
>> Unfortunately, yes.  That's why I'm moving to Pan F.
>
> I'm no expert on B&W chemistry, but I get fine results using D76 1:!
> and TMax.
>
> - MCC
> -----
>
> Mark Cassino Photography
>
> Kalamazoo, MI
>
> http://www.markcassino.com
>
> -----
>
>



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