One of the main advantages of Mike Ware's 2019 Simple Cyanotype, at least for me, is that you can tailor the chemistry to your negatives, i.e., the negatives your printer/ink system is capable of producing. Mike Ware gives the recipes for three versions, the only difference being the amount of ammonia solution in them:
"Intermediate degrees of contrast with Exposure Scales lying between 2.7 and 1.8 can be obtained by mixing sensitizer solutions 1 and 3 proportionally."
If one could print the perfect negatives, then there would be no question that using the low contrast solution would give the widest scale. But I use a Canon PRO-100 with a limited capacity to block UV, and, therefore, far from perfect negatives. Here's what I had to do to get the most optimal chemistry for my setup:
First, I made the three solutions, named as:
As you see, each has a different optimal Dmin-Dmax range. Here's what the density graph looks like in terms of grayscale K% at different exposure times:
The hockey-stick style lines going to the top are the Dmax's. For my setup (chemistry and paper) the highest Dmax I can get is capped at K=75%. But each version rises up to that level at different speeds.
The lower three lines are the Dmin's. You can see how CSL's Dmin rises much more rapidly than the other two, making CSL the worst option for my setup. Here's a better view of the tonal range (Dmax-Dmin) for each solution:
For my setup the best I can do with each solution is:
Hope this is useful.
- Low Contrast: Exposure Scale ~2.7
- Medium Contrast: Exposure Scale ~2.3
- High Contrast: Exposure Scale ~1.8
"Intermediate degrees of contrast with Exposure Scales lying between 2.7 and 1.8 can be obtained by mixing sensitizer solutions 1 and 3 proportionally."
If one could print the perfect negatives, then there would be no question that using the low contrast solution would give the widest scale. But I use a Canon PRO-100 with a limited capacity to block UV, and, therefore, far from perfect negatives. Here's what I had to do to get the most optimal chemistry for my setup:
First, I made the three solutions, named as:
- CSL: the low contrast solution
- CSH: the high contrast solution
- CSM: the medium contrast solution, which is equivalent to a 1:1 mix of CSL+CSH
As you see, each has a different optimal Dmin-Dmax range. Here's what the density graph looks like in terms of grayscale K% at different exposure times:
The hockey-stick style lines going to the top are the Dmax's. For my setup (chemistry and paper) the highest Dmax I can get is capped at K=75%. But each version rises up to that level at different speeds.
The lower three lines are the Dmin's. You can see how CSL's Dmin rises much more rapidly than the other two, making CSL the worst option for my setup. Here's a better view of the tonal range (Dmax-Dmin) for each solution:
For my setup the best I can do with each solution is:
- CSL @4min: Dmax=69% Drange=64
- CSM @10m: Dmax=74% Drange=73
- CSH @12m: Dmax=73% Drange=71
Hope this is useful.
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