Yeah, I did those photo things too, including making emulsions. I even made my own silver nitrate (it's pretty expensive to buy!), dissolving silver in nitric acid. It's an exothermic reaction which fills the fume hood with those beautiful, orange-brown fumes, which I read afterwards, would have killed me painfully after a few days if that fume hood wasn't up to the task. It was.
In any case, I managed to do some pretty decent orthochromatic (sensitized to green, in addition to the natural blue response of the silver bromide-iodide emulsion), approximately ISO 25, emulsions with small grain and good resolution. Was even able to coat those on polyester base treated with a DIY high voltage corona discharge contraption which also nearly killed me, usable in a normal roll film camera. Good memories.
Luckily, water in Finland is mostly very soft - depending on location, it's either soft, or even softer. Ignoring actually sensitive processes, it's good for almost any use, including those where people usually recommend deionised or distilled water.