I would have embraced that at one time, but I think it's too much into the 
peripheral for me now. Andre Adams "The Negative" was my motivation but I read 
widely back then.

Paul via phone

> On Mar 16, 2016, at 7:14 PM, Mark C <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> Just ordered a copy on Amazon - looks like it will be an interesting read. 
> The resource I have relied upon is Morgan and Morgan's "Darkroom Book." It's 
> more of a general guide to developing and printing and includes a chapter 
> about how to setup a home darkroom. But one chapter - "Fine Tuning the 
> Chemistry" - goes into the essential components  of developers, fixers, hypo 
> clear, etc. Includes recipes for various developers. The book you recommend 
> sounds llke it covers this in much more detail.
> 
> Mark
> 
>> On 3/6/2016 3:14 PM, Darren Addy wrote:
>> This may be of interest to only a few, but I pass it along anyway...
>> 
>> If you want a "Master's Class" in B&W film developers, you have to get
>> a copy of the 1998 "The Film Developing Cookbook". WOW. Just received
>> my copy and it is a well-organized, easy read on the various families
>> of developers, what they are best at as well as the formulas to make
>> your own. There are also chapters on Films (obviously dated),
>> Developer ingredients, Development Procedures, and After Development
>> Processes: Stop Baths, Fixers, Washing.
>> 
>> The book has "three special emphases: how to use different developers
>> to achieve a wide range of pictorial effects, how to mix and use
>> solutions from scratch (and how to create new ones), and how to
>> process film for maximum archival permanance." "Much of the
>> information in this book have never been published before."
>> 
>> A quick perusal allows me to say that this includes a formula for
>> HC-110 gleaned from its 1971 Patent information. (However, convenient,
>> versatile and economical as HC-110 may be "it produces coarser grain
>> than D-76, and is not as sharp as many high acutance developers." Page
>> 67 contains Edwal formulas, including Edwal Super 20: "The official
>> formula for Super 20 has never before been published, though several
>> popular authors have (incorrectly) claimed to know it."
>> 
>> The book was begun as a response to difficulty people had getting good
>> images from Kodak's Tmax film. (I have about 13 36-exposure rolls of
>> Tmax 100 in inventory.)
>> 
>> If you are interested in B&W film developing, I can't recommend it
>> highly enough.
> 
> 
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