I am completely new to masking and have read up on it a considerate amount. A lot of the masking information out there on masking refers to B&W printing. The little info that I did manage to find on color negative masking unanimously agrees on using Kodak T-MAX as a replacement for Kodak's discontinued masking film. Ctein in "Post Exposure" recommends to use dangerous chemicals in raw states. As this is too dangerous for my liking, I am wondering if there is another way to achieve a neutral hue in my masks as I do not wish to have, as Ctein calls it, "color crossover", especially when printing with multiple masks. Ive read elsewhere that using t-max with T-MAX RS developer and TF-4 fixer will eliminate the color cast in the T-MAX neg. Is this process the standard for color negative printing with masks these days? Are there other ways to achieve a relatively neutral hue mask? Is the inherent "magenta" hue in T-MAX film dramatically problematic when used as a mask in color printing? Also, how are people developing their single frame masks, tray or dipping tank?
thanks for your time,
Jin
thanks for your time,
Jin