Rodinal, 1:50 is my personal choice.
MindofMel said:I've done alot of that and stand/semi-stand and I find the negatives look a little flat and just very 'grey' and the blacks are a bit crappy for lack of a better explanation. Even the highlights end up grey. Can't beat the simplicity of the whole process though!
Hi there,
Been using tri x with Rodinal at 1+25 and have been very happy with the results, prints form these negatives are here: http://alexabrahamsphotography.blogspot.co.uk
I have also used tri x with ID-11 but wasn't as pleased. There wasn't as much sharpness and actuance was much lower.
Pushing in rodinal will result in more defined and larger grain but I like this so I push to 1600 most of the time with 1+50 dilution, still really nice results.
Hope this helps
Hi there,
Been using tri x with Rodinal at 1+25 and have been very happy with the results, prints form these negatives are here: http://alexabrahamsphotography.blogspot.co.uk
I have also used tri x with ID-11 but wasn't as pleased. There wasn't as much sharpness and actuance was much lower.
Pushing in rodinal will result in more defined and larger grain but I like this so I push to 1600 most of the time with 1+50 dilution, still really nice results.
Hope this helps
Mel, you seem to be heavily judging based on flickr/internet images - just a word of warning, what you are often seeing (as much as the film and developer) is just the output of a scanner, a post-processing program and jpeg algorithms. For instance, the Plustek 35mm scanners have been known to exacerbate grain slightly, regardless of the combination of film+dev. The only way to really judge a purely film + developer combination is with a negative and a loupe, or by printing it (and even then there are plenty of variables that affect the end result).