DEAR LIST, I have always wondered why neither Kodak nor Ilford have sold their 3200 speed films as sheet films. Where else would one really LOVE the speed and not care as much about the grain? Don't you find that curious? I lust after Delta 3200 in 8X10. Can you imagine that speed? Even after filter factors and/or bellow factors you could use a high F# and not have to expose for seconds! Anyone know anyone at those places? Maybe we could induce them to make some in those sizes? CHEERS! BOB -----Original Message----- From: pure-silver-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:pure-silver-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Richard Knoppow Sent: Wednesday, September 12, 2007 10:19 PM To: pure-silver@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: [pure-silver] Re: Ilford developers ----- Original Message ----- From: "Shannon Stoney" <shannonstoney@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> To: <pure-silver@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Wednesday, September 12, 2007 6:51 PM Subject: [pure-silver] Re: Ilford developers > Thanks, this is the answer I was looking for. I am > thinking of switching from DDX to ID-11 in order to get > slightly less grain. But, DDX is very convenient, as it > is already diluted and it is easy to make slightly > different dilutions, like 1+4, 1+6, and 1+8, for different > purposes. > > --shannon > If fine grain is what you want check out Ilford Perceptol or Kodak Microdol-X. These two are identical and are extra-fine-grain developers when used full strength. There will be a speed loss of about 3/4 stop, not a lot and grain is noticably finer than D-76 type developers. When either developer is used with ISO-100 speed Tabular grain films, such as Kodak 100T-Max, Ilford Delta 100, or Fuji Acros, the grain is nearly as fine as the late, lamented Kodak Technical Pan but with about four times the speed and with no problems with contrast control. While Tech Pan had extrememely high resolution the resolution of the above three films is around 200 lp/mm for high contrast targets, which is very high. My experience using this combination for 35mm is that the negatives begin to have the smoothness of tone rendition I associate with larger formats. A caviet, the combination has almost no acutance effect so mushy lenses will be very obvious. Xtol is nearly as fine grain and some what sharper. Also Xtol has some speed gain, about the same as Microphen, T-Max, DDX, etc., that is other Phenidone developers. It is also sharper than Perceptol or Microdol. The only drawack to Xtol is the well known sudden death syndrome. --- Richard Knoppow Los Angeles, CA, USA dickburk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx ============================================================================ ================================= To unsubscribe from this list, go to www.freelists.org and logon to your account (the same e-mail address and password you set-up when you subscribed,) and unsubscribe from there. ============================================================================================================= To unsubscribe from this list, go to www.freelists.org and logon to your account (the same e-mail address and password you set-up when you subscribed,) and unsubscribe from there.