Re: tri-x and bpf 200


Peter Marshall (petermarshall@cix.co.uk)
Wed, 27 Jan 1999 21:39 +0000 (GMT)


Patrick

I'd try developing in a universal developer (or print developer). I used
Paterson or Ilford Universal at its normal 1+9 dilution for FP4. However
any clean working dev will do.

Exposure can be around normal (400ASA) and you simply need to increase the
dev time to get the required contrast. This will depend on the subject and
also on the platinum/palladium chemistry you are using. You don't need
fantastically high contrast, but you do want virtually clear areas of film
for the deepest shadows - minimum exposure and low fog.

Peter



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