Hi all,
Ever since I did my first sepia toning, and subsequently explored selenium, blue, copper red and combination tonings, I have found that many of the toned prints seem to have a very nice "inner glow" to them that is lacking in normal untoned prints. I am especially font of partial sepia and combined sepia / selenium tonings.
I always find that, beside a transition and addition of colour, the prints seem to become more "alive". It's a bit hard to express, but the effect reminds me of what classical oilpainters refer to as "glazing" with transparent layers of oil paints. Glazing in oil painting, and the inner glow that it creates that is so much appreciated and sought after by both painters and art loving public, is an effect caused by several differently translucent / transparent layers of oil paint being applied on top of each other, with light being reflected by each of them back to the observer, and mixing into a new "glowing" colour.
Classical oil painters apply so called "dead" layers and multiple layers of transparent and sometimes complementary colours to build up the final image. Many of the most famous 17th, 18th and 19th century paintings have been made this way, with a renewed interest in these techniques in recent years.
I have been wondering if a similar effect takes place in (partially) and / or combined toned prints? Anyone else have ideas or opinions on this?
Ever since I did my first sepia toning, and subsequently explored selenium, blue, copper red and combination tonings, I have found that many of the toned prints seem to have a very nice "inner glow" to them that is lacking in normal untoned prints. I am especially font of partial sepia and combined sepia / selenium tonings.
I always find that, beside a transition and addition of colour, the prints seem to become more "alive". It's a bit hard to express, but the effect reminds me of what classical oilpainters refer to as "glazing" with transparent layers of oil paints. Glazing in oil painting, and the inner glow that it creates that is so much appreciated and sought after by both painters and art loving public, is an effect caused by several differently translucent / transparent layers of oil paint being applied on top of each other, with light being reflected by each of them back to the observer, and mixing into a new "glowing" colour.
Classical oil painters apply so called "dead" layers and multiple layers of transparent and sometimes complementary colours to build up the final image. Many of the most famous 17th, 18th and 19th century paintings have been made this way, with a renewed interest in these techniques in recent years.
I have been wondering if a similar effect takes place in (partially) and / or combined toned prints? Anyone else have ideas or opinions on this?


