Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1997/01/13
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]I've enjoyed this discussion of B&W film development. Thanks to Greg and others for the detailed description of their methods. Since so much has been written here about Rodinal, I wanted to contribute something about one of my very favorite brews. For those interested, the definitive discussion of Rodinal's properties and uses was contained in an article in the December 1979 issue of Popular Photography by Bob Schwalberg. Anyone interested in this subject would do well to find a copy. To keep this posting on-topic for the LUGs, note that the magazine ran side-by-side image comparisons, D-76 1+1 and Rodinal, with Tri-X shot with an M3 and 50mm (Summicron, I suppose). Just to hit a couple of its points: Rodinal is distinguished from most other commercial developers in that it is not a finegrain developer. It includes no silver solvents; its preservative does not act as sodium sulfite does. Simply put, with D-76, ID-11 and others, the sodium sulfite scatters some of the developed silver indiscriminately across the image. Rodinal, by contrast, brings out the inherent grain structure of the film itself, without such scattering. Thus a fine-grain film turns out fine grained in the Rodinal negative, and a grainy film produces a grainy Rodinal negative. What you get in return for giving up the fine-grain effects of the sodium sulifite is enhanced image sharpness, the "Eberhard edge," and adjacency effects -- in other words, accutance. For me, Rodinal's payoff is also the beautiful tonal range it provides. It has a great ability to hold highlights while retaining shadows. By the way, the magazine provided recommended times at various dilutions. But those are probably impractical to try duplicating today because films have changed in the 17 years since then (perhaps even Tri-X). But the recommendation on dilution probably still holds. Basically 1+25 with 400 ISO films is probably bested by D-76 or others. Dilution of 1+50 is where Rodinal really shines in brilliance, while 1+100 gives highest accutance. It is useful for a variety of films and shouldn't be catagorized as a slow-speed film developer, in my opinion. Some add sodium sulfite to Rodinal. I've not done that more than a few times because it seemed to be counterproductive. I'd also add that my experimentation with Rodinal led me to Edwal FG-7, which has some similar properties. It's also a great developer, and often overlooked. Many add sodium sulfite to it as well, though the same argument against doing so also holds. I find it gives increased sharpness at higher, for me, EIs. Sorry for length here. Hope some find this of interest. Bill Welch