Diafine is a two bath developer. So I assume you meant "or ANOTHER two bath developer?"

Diafine is a two bath developer. So I assume you meant "or ANOTHER two bath developer?"
Nope. Didn't realise it was a two-bath. Just looked it up. I should mix some up and compare... Thanks!
Thank you!This is a gorgeous photograph. You got such smooth tonality here, not to mention a great composition.
I've never tried scratch mixed and I'm not sure if the formula in the Darkroom Cookbook is the same/actual formula. It's readily available but pretty expensive to just try because it's only in gallons now apparently. With decent care that's a lifetime supply. The stuff for most practical purposes does not wear out (it does, eventually, but I've put over 150 rolls through a QUART before seeing any diminished results before, back in the late 70s and early 80s when I used a ton of it as my high school yearbook photographer.) Putting the dry film into bath A (do NOT pre-wet) results in some being carried out and into bath B which does no harm to B (the reverse is not true and be sure not to contaminate A with B - the instructions on the commercial version are clear on that) so the level will gradually decrease. But a gallon is expensive if you don't know if you'll like it.
Not the sharpest but it has its virtues (BTW I did the magnifier click on that image I posted above and I don't know if it's Flickr or my scan, which was made from a print, but the original print IS sharp, WAY more so than that. But you won't confuse it with Rodinal or anything.)
The suggest film speeds on the package are, or at least they weret on the last batch I bought which has been years and I still have two unopened gallons because I stocked up, woefully outdated and list films no longer on the market plus speeds for old versions of film. Pre-2007 Tri-X was great in it at 1600. The current version does "ok" at 1000 but 800 is probably more reasonable. I was really displeased to learn that when I got back into photography in 2011 or so.
Thanks for the info, Roger.![]()
100% agree. I have shot both and HR-50 is very good! Some sample HR-50 scans:
Never said anything about fixing the film. I'm more interested in minimising its contrast.
What about Rollei RPX 25, anyone used that?
I have heard people say that Pan F does not cope as well in high dynamic range scenes as do faster films. Is that true?
I have tested a few films in Rodinal. I guess the question to you would be what you mean by "do well?" Rodinal curves tend to build contrast rather quickly, causing some expansion in the highlights, as demonstrated below with Ilford Delta 100. Whether one considers this a good result or not, is up to debateI have also heard that its latent image is less stable than typical films and is best developed soon after exposure.
With the question of what films do well with Rodinal, there is, as usual, a huge range of opinions. For example, some say Tmax films are good in Rodinal and some say they are terrible with it. But there seems to be a pretty broad consensus that Pan F works well with Rodinal.
I got the best results from P30 at EI 25 with Rodinal 1+100 semi-stand or Adox Silvermax developer at EI 30. Perhaps I should have used even an lower EI. There is debate about whether it is as blue biased as ortho. One would think this would be a an easy question to answer objectively. Has Ferrania published the spectral response data of P30? I agree that it is a temperamental film. One person said that some of his best and worst photos were with P30. I can understand that.
I agree that Adox HR-50 is worthy of consideration. In Henning's tests of a film based on the same emulsion, it has some of the finest grain, better than TMX, bested only by the document films. I have used it with the special developer that some have said is similar to a Spur developer and gotten good results. Does it really requre the special developer? I don't know.
I have heard people say that Pan F does not cope as well in high dynamic range scenes as do faster films. Is that true?
I have also heard that its latent image is less stable than typical films and is best developed soon after exposure.
With the question of what films do well with Rodinal, there is, as usual, a huge range of opinions. For example, some say Tmax films are good in Rodinal and some say they are terrible with it. But there seems to be a pretty broad consensus that Pan F works well with Rodinal.
After testing P30 in Thornton's 2-Bath, I think that is the road will be going... I'm also going to see how Pan F 50 responds to it
Andrew, I ran a roll through a Thornton Two bath and the results were really nice. I am running a roll at ISO 32 right now to compare to this ISO 80 roll. These are all inverted using Negative Lab Pro in standard lab mode.
![]()
I got the best results from P30 at EI 25 with Rodinal 1+100 semi-stand or Adox Silvermax developer at EI 30. Perhaps I should have used even an lower EI. There is debate about whether it is as blue biased as ortho. One would think this would be a an easy question to answer objectively. Has Ferrania published the spectral response data of P30? I agree that it is a temperamental film. One person said that some of his best and worst photos were with P30. I can understand that.
I have not been able to find any spectral response graphs for P30. I guess all we can do is shoot a colour chart and compare with other pan films that I use... On that note, Scott Micciche posted his colour chart results on Photrio: https://www.photrio.com/forum/threads/film-ferrania-p30.146259/page-37#post-2378766
Well, I mixed up a batch of D-96 and processed my Ferrania P30 samples, using the Ferrania official recommended time, temperature, and procedure. Here's a screenshot from that page:
View attachment 325792
Ferrania recommends eight minutes at EI 50 or EI 80 at 21C using continuous agitation. My Jobo set up is calibrated for 20C, so that's a deviation from the recommendations. I got a very interesting result. Essentially, exposing at EI 50 and processing in D-96 gave me somewhat lower effective film speed and slightly higher contrast than XTOL.
View attachment 325793 View attachment 325795
Yes, it's possible that the formula for D-96 I used is wrong, so I post it here so you can tell me if it's correct or not. My chemicals seem fresh. I use them often for mixing my own D-76 when I just need a one-liter batch. I repeated the test twice and got virtually identical results. This tells me that it makes little sense to run an entire curve family test again because D-96 does not produce results that are drastically different than XTOL, unless you guys think otherwise. I don't mind running the full test, if you guys think it makes sense.
View attachment 325796
@Film-Niko mentioned that inversion agitation should be used with the P30. That sounded like a very good idea, so I decided to try it. I used D-96 for six minutes at 20C with four very gentle inversions every minute. I though that was a good compromise between trying to tame contrast and reducing the risk of uneven development. Essentially, the curve has the same overall shape, so you can expect very similar tonality between inversion and rotary agitation, but contrast did drop a bit, along with a negligible change in effective film speed. At this point, inversion agitation seems to work out better because you don't have to cut development time below four minutes. So, perhaps five-six minutes at 20C in D-96 with gentle inversion agitation is the way to go, provided it gives even development. More work is needed to confirm that. I think @Paul Howell and @Andrew O'Neill mentioned using a two-bath developer, and I am beginning to think that that would probably be a good choice for Ferrania P30, I am just not sure how it would work for more fine-grained contrast control, as in pulling and pushing. I don't have much experience with two-bath developers, so perhaps someone would chime in and tell us more about them.
View attachment 325798 View attachment 325803
Here are the two curves on the same plot for comparison's sake:
View attachment 325804
It seems to me that Ferrania wants to promote a "punchy" kind of look, much like the recently launched CatLABS X FILM 320 Pro, doesn't it? It's an interesting look, no doubt, but, to me, it's only for a special occasion. I can also understand people being frustrated with the film and giving up on it. After all, the ILFORD PAN F Plus turned out to be exactly what Ilford promised in its documentation, whereas the P30 needs more careful treatment to get good performance out of it.
I think that the smoke screen about cinema origins is to fend off some of the (often harsh) criticism of their fledgling product. There is a solid argument for D-96, though, which is that it intentionally produces lower contrast—which makes sense for this contrasty film.The Ferrania folks make much of the idea that the original P30 was a cinema film. One of the arguments they make for the use of D-96 is that they used something similar with it in the film industry. But cinema is such a different context. The original negative is duplicated many times to arrive at the final print. Why would we think that what would work well for that situation would also be the best for pictorial photography when the end product is usually only one or two generations from the original?
The Ferrania folks make much of the idea that the original P30 was a cinema film. One of the arguments they make for the use of D-96 is that they used something similar with it in the film industry. But cinema is such a different context. The original negative is duplicated many times to arrive at the final print. Why would we think that what would work well for that situation would also be the best for pictorial photography when the end product is usually only one or two generations from the original?
Maybe 80 ISO is obtained when using a particular developer, I'm just guessing as I have no experience with the P30 whatsoever...
However I'm wondering why folks at Ferrania have resuscitated a cinema film when there were Ferrania still films as well at the time...
Photrio.com contains affiliate links to products. We may receive a commission for purchases made through these links. To read our full affiliate disclosure statement please click Here. |
PHOTRIO PARTNERS EQUALLY FUNDING OUR COMMUNITY: ![]() |