b\w two bath film developing

greenspun.com : LUSENET : B&W Photo - Film & Processing : One Thread

Information required on two bath developers and the process involved Thanks Tim

-- tim stredwick (timstredwick@hotmail.com), February 11, 2000

Answers

First you soak the film for a certain time in the first bath which contains the actual developing agent. The emulsion is then saturated with the developer. The second bath, in which the film is then soaked for a certain time *w/o washing* (or you will have removed the developer again) contains the activator without which the developer will not do anything at all.

Two-bath developers are usually compensating developers, because there is only a limited amount of developing agent in the emulsion, and this is consumed faster in the highlights and slower in the shadows. They are also often very tolerant w/ respect to processing times for the same reason: If the film has been soaked for a sufficient time in the developer, leaving it in the activator a little longer is not so likely to do much harm as there is no developer in the highlights any more. One nice aspect of two-bath developers is also that films of different makes and types can usually be processed at very similar, or even identical times. The catch, however, is that (at least to my knowledge) use them for contrast control in the way you can use other developers, i.e. developing the film somewhat longer for enhanced contrast.

So far, I have only tested Emofin by Tetenal.

-- Thomas Wollstein (thomas_wollstein@web.de), February 11, 2000.


You can vary contrast by changing the time in bath A with most two- bath developers.

-- William Marderness (wmarderness@hotmail.com), February 11, 2000.

so, in layman's terms, what is the advantage to using a 2 bath process? does it give you better shadow detail without overdeveloping the highlights, or am i totally going down the wrong track? (probably the case).

-- (chebaby@hotmail.com), February 16, 2000.

Moderation questions? read the FAQ