I have used EcoPro fixer for years with students (age 10 up) and in my home
darkroom. It has very low or no odour, has only two non-toxic ingredients
and it works for resin coated paper and motion picture film (7363, 3368,
Foma R100, PF2; negative and reversal). I dilute it from the bottle 1:7

Sandy McLennan
Huntsville, Ontario, Canada
sandymclennan.com


On Sat, Jul 27, 2019 at 1:24 PM Ben Balcom <[email protected]> wrote:

> Hi all. Hoping someone might have some input/advice here. I teach an
> Advanced 16mm class in which students do most of their own B+W Reversal
> Processing for the semester. I'm looking for a Dektol alternative that
> comes in liquid concentrate to avoid the powder mixing. These are what I'm
> considering:
>
>
> 1) Eco Pro Chemicals:
> https://www.digitaltruth.com/products/ecopro_overview.php
> <https://www.digitaltruth.com/products/ecopro_overview.php?fbclid=IwAR2rT4rxzOTenuF_RMWWLS1C40P6LR6EpZavbAllUz-v195_0bu6SUuLG5g>
> Eco pro makes eco-friendly developer, stop, fix &c...this might be good
> for the students and their nervous sloshings around.
>
> 2) Liquidol: http://stores.photoformulary.com/liquidol-paper-developer/
> <http://stores.photoformulary.com/liquidol-paper-developer/?fbclid=IwAR3n1UBp9sU9_z8EqIW-bBGHrQv3rdln197YwnmiJkAtEKuLITE4aoZBP9g>
> Designed as a high-yield Dektol substitute.
>
> I've tried both and get solid results with small test strips. Still
> haven't run a full 100', but I feel like they're good options.
>
> Has anyone had any experience with either one??
>
> Many thanks,
> Ben
>
> --
> Ben Balcom
> he/him/his
> benbalcom.com
> microlightscinema.com
> [email protected]
> 414-902-0236
>
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