   |
I am new to the site, so please forgive the intrusion. I recently took an advanced b&w printing course at ICP in NY and the instructor (a Magnum printer) suggested that Microdol-X is one of the best for Tri-X. It is a low-contrast developer. I typically used high-contrast (more active) developers which makes printing more difficult (harder to squeeze contrast into paper than expand onto paper). If you need speed, Acufine and Diafine are really unique. D-76 is classic. It comes down to a lot of taste. I would go D-76 or Microdol from now on. |
|
|
|
|
|