keithwms
Member
This is a spot-dodging technique. If you have clear areas on your neg (e.g. defects in the emulsion and such), these can lead to black spots on your print that are difficult to retouch.
It's much easier to retouch a white spot on a print, so... I've been experimenting with an idea which I am sure others have done before but I haven't seen it described, so here goes....
What I did was buy some water soluble / washable childrens' coloured pens. Crayola brand is what I got, just a pack of sharp pens with which you can spot-dodge the print before exposing it.
What you do is put a red filter over your enlarger bulb and, using the negative image cast down on the paper as a reference, you make little spots over the white areas. Then you print normally. When you immerse your paper in the developer, you agitate vigorously for a few sec and 99.44% of the washable ink will disappear. I have verified that it leaves easily even from matte fiber-based paper.
So then... after development / stop / fix, dry, you will have lovely little white spots where you would have had nasty black ones. The white spots are easy to retouch- they can simply be filled in with a graphite pencil or spotted with solution.
I had tried various other methods such as making a dupe neg and retouching that, spot bleaching, etc. I tell you: this technique is very easy and the possibilities are endless.
Note: this spot-dodging could also be done with a light graphite pencil, but then you need to erase it, and with some papers that might pull up fiber. Plus I can't get pencil marks at all on RC papers. The washable ink method seems to work well on all papers that I've tried.
That's it, just a little tip. I hope that it is useful to somebody...
It's much easier to retouch a white spot on a print, so... I've been experimenting with an idea which I am sure others have done before but I haven't seen it described, so here goes....
What I did was buy some water soluble / washable childrens' coloured pens. Crayola brand is what I got, just a pack of sharp pens with which you can spot-dodge the print before exposing it.
What you do is put a red filter over your enlarger bulb and, using the negative image cast down on the paper as a reference, you make little spots over the white areas. Then you print normally. When you immerse your paper in the developer, you agitate vigorously for a few sec and 99.44% of the washable ink will disappear. I have verified that it leaves easily even from matte fiber-based paper.
So then... after development / stop / fix, dry, you will have lovely little white spots where you would have had nasty black ones. The white spots are easy to retouch- they can simply be filled in with a graphite pencil or spotted with solution.
I had tried various other methods such as making a dupe neg and retouching that, spot bleaching, etc. I tell you: this technique is very easy and the possibilities are endless.
Note: this spot-dodging could also be done with a light graphite pencil, but then you need to erase it, and with some papers that might pull up fiber. Plus I can't get pencil marks at all on RC papers. The washable ink method seems to work well on all papers that I've tried.
That's it, just a little tip. I hope that it is useful to somebody...