Dan Dozer
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- Joined
- Dec 10, 2004
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- 411
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So - the Chromoskedasic process has intrigued me for some time and with the article on it in the May/June issue of PhotoTechnique magazine, I decided to give it a try. I got the activator, stabilizer, the Legacy Pro Ecopro BW paper developer, used Ilford Warmtone glossy paper, and followed all the directions in the article.
The results were extremely disappointing.
1 - First I tried the brush applied method. With both the stabilizer and activator, I got virtually no color changing at all. Only when I re-applied developer did I get anything and that was a pretty intense yellow orange to the highlights. There was no color change in the darker tones at all.
The confusing thing was that when I turned on the darkroom lights for the application of the stabilizer, there was virtually no darkening of the print from the lights being on in the darkroom. I have no idea why this didn't affect anything because the print was not fixed yet. My light is a standard 2 tube fluorescent light in the ceiling. May be it just isn't the right wavelength to affect the paper much after it's gone through the developer process.
2 - So - I then tried the tray method and it went much worse. There was no color change at all. They did get a little darker from the first tray, but there was no "Fluorescing" even after 10 minutes. Then when it went into try #2 with the darkroom lights turned on, nothing changed at all. The only thing I got were dark bluish gray prints with blotches in the highlight areas.
Has anyone else out there tried this process yet and did it work anything like what the articles say? None of my prints turned out anything like what was shown in the article.
The results were extremely disappointing.
1 - First I tried the brush applied method. With both the stabilizer and activator, I got virtually no color changing at all. Only when I re-applied developer did I get anything and that was a pretty intense yellow orange to the highlights. There was no color change in the darker tones at all.
The confusing thing was that when I turned on the darkroom lights for the application of the stabilizer, there was virtually no darkening of the print from the lights being on in the darkroom. I have no idea why this didn't affect anything because the print was not fixed yet. My light is a standard 2 tube fluorescent light in the ceiling. May be it just isn't the right wavelength to affect the paper much after it's gone through the developer process.
2 - So - I then tried the tray method and it went much worse. There was no color change at all. They did get a little darker from the first tray, but there was no "Fluorescing" even after 10 minutes. Then when it went into try #2 with the darkroom lights turned on, nothing changed at all. The only thing I got were dark bluish gray prints with blotches in the highlight areas.
Has anyone else out there tried this process yet and did it work anything like what the articles say? None of my prints turned out anything like what was shown in the article.