Clay, So is the heated wax applied with a soft cloth in circular motions? Or can the wax be heated to liquid form and then applied with a puddle pusher in one sweeping motion much like a layer of gum is applied? Thanks
Although I don't see the smilely faces, I can only presume you are joking Sandy (although I agree - I've tried it and the difference in dmax isn't worth the bother to me. As Arentz says - you'll never achieve the high dmaxs of a silver paper, so get used to it or switch to silver. Let the eye be fooled into accepting the dmax on Pt/Pd that you do achieve)
... the look after treatment was less appealing to me than before treatment. Like I said, just not worth the trouble IMO.
Hi Lukas,
If what you're after is just better shadow detail, maybe you can just manipulate the negatives so that the resulting print exhibit good shadow tones separation "without varnising it"... e.g. slightly more exposure (reduction in film speed) and slightly less development with your current coating solution, or, just use negatives with more density range and suit your coating solution to that -> for instance, I use negatives calibrated for cyanotype (having a density range of log 1.5) for printing gum... That way, I have very good shadow separation.
Regards,
Loris.
Loris,
I don't think this is a matter of improving the negative/contrast control. It is principally the case that a platinum picture (other alternative prints, too) has a shine and debth, that is, a shadow separation which it loses when dry. This dry-down effect is due to the different light reflection of the paper fibres when dry and can never be mended by optimizing the print, because it is due to the nature of the substrate. If you varnish the print, however, at least a part of that lustre it showed under water may be regained. But the difference is clearly there! The shadows simply shine!
So, I often read that the paper, "haptic" quality of platinum or other alternative prints, including he matte surface, is very much cherished and part of the attraction of these prints. I cannot help thinking, however, that this particular aesthetic perception should not be written in stone, but open to re-evaluation. After all, paintings are also routinely varnished, and nobody complains.
I cannot help thinking, however, that this particular aesthetic perception should not be written in stone, but open to re-evaluation. After all, paintings are also routinely varnished, and nobody complains.
Waxing or coating can not increase the shadow detail in a print. It can create the illusion of raising dmax but technically it can not add any detail that is not already there. If your are after more sheen or shine and want maximum dmax why not just choose a paper like azo to print on? Of course, like Don said, what ever floats your boat.
...this thread looks a bit to me like an effort to nail down a conventional aesthetic standard, this is why I feel I should argue my point...
...Another thought which occurs to me right now is: do some people cherish the matte look of a print so much because they take it as a distinguishing mark of a hand-crafted print?...
I am grateful, of course, that I am allowed to do as I please; however, this thread looks a bit to me like an effort to nail down a conventional aesthetic standard, this is why I feel I should argue my point.
By the way, I also sometimes like the matte look of a print (though there are also matt and semi-matte varnishes), but this is very much also a matter of what you want to do with a print.
Another thought which occurs to me right now is: do some people cherish the matte look of a print so much because they take it as a distinguishing mark of a hand-crafted print?
Another thought which occurs to me right now is: do some people cherish the matte look of a print so much because they take it as a distinguishing mark of a hand-crafted print?
...I have to agree with Sandy's opinion that waxing does not bring the print back to when it was "wet". Just place a waxed print beside a just processed print of the same image and you will see...
Umm, no, not in my case anyway. Back in the days before I took up gum printing as my sole means of photographic expression and was printing in traditional silver materials, I loved printing on matte surface papers, and was very unhappy when manufacturers discontinued them in favor of semigloss or pearl surfaces. I just really LIKE the look of a print without any gloss to it, handcrafted or not.
Katharine
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