Seeking information on Palladium toning of Kallitypes. On this page:
www.alternativephotography.com
Sandy King shows several examples of palladium toned kallitypes. One is warm toned, as I expected, and several are neutral toned. There is no mention in the article of what processing details allow one to achieve one or the other.
I am on the fence re: trying kallitype, and the possibility of choosing warm or neutral after palladium toning would be a significant incentive.
Oh, and I did email Sandy King a week ago; must be a very busy person.
While I may not be Sandy King, I've done some experimentation with my Kallitypes and you may find the results interesting.
TL;DR The developer you use for Kallitypes may influence the final print color after toning. Or more specifically, the color of the print after the development bath will influence the final color of the print after toning.
I am printing on Legion Revere Platinum paper. Once the paper is coated I place it on a drying screen over a tray of room temperature water and partially cover it. I expose the paper when the coating is dry and the paper is slightly damp to the touch. Too damp and I get uneven exposure. I find that this helps the coating to absorb into the paper evenly and seems to help with dmax over leaving the paper too dry. I am also using the following developer. This should be similar or identical to the Kallitype Black developer sold by Bostick & Sullivan.
- Sodium Acetate 100 gm
- water 1 qt
- Tartaric Acid 3 gm
I find that when this developer is mixed fresh, the prints emerging from the developer bath are very brown in color. After a few prints go through the developer, it causes the prints to become very neutral back with high contrast. I don't yet have an explanation for this "ripening" of the developer, but this does appear to influence the final color of the print post toning.
Here are my findings:
-Palladium toning with fresh (brown) developer yeilds notably brown prints once dry.
-Palladium toning with "ripened" (black) developer yeilds neutral blacks once dry (might have the slightest hint of warmth when compared with platinum toned prints).
-Heating the sodium acetate developer influences the print color after development AND palladium toning.
-The hotter the developer the more warm the final print color
-If the developer is too hot OR stays too hot for too long, it can stain the paper or damage the surface.
-Adequately warmed "ripened" sodium acetate developer yeilds a rich brown black print.
My process for heating the developer and developing the prints:
1. pour 550 to 850ml of developer into a one liter pitcher
2. Heat with a Sous Vide until it reaches 110F
3. Quickly pour the heated developer into a 12x16" tray and then add the print and develope for 10 minutes
4. Clear in tetrasodium EDTA for 5-10 minutes
5. Rinse
6. Tone in palladium toner until completion (5-10 minutes depending on strength)
7. Rinse
8. Fix in Sodium Thiosulfate for 2 minutes
9. Rinse for at least 20 minutes
10. Dry on screen face up
Other findings and problems:
-110F seems to be the sweet spot for the above process. Maximizes the brown effect before the paper stains.
-Pour the developer in the try first. Pouring the developer over the print may cause staining or spots to appear.
-Pouring the same amount of developer into a smaller tray (8x10) may also be causing staining. My best guess is that the developer is staying hot for two long as there is less surface area for the developer to cool.
-While I can get results that are consistent enough to be useful with the outlined process, there is still some varience between my prints when it comes to color and dmax. This may be a result of varience in temperature and the state of "ripening" of the developer.
-Replenishing 1:1 "ripened" developer with fresh developer still goes through the "ripening" process.
-Recently replenished developer will create a rust color sediment after the first print or two. This may get worse with heat and small trays. More testing required.
-The sodium acetate developer should be filtered with a coffee after every print or two. A black sedement will form which I believe is silver. This silver can get stuck in the paper fibers and cause staining, especially on the back of the print.
-The trays should be scrubbed clean to remove black sedement and prevent staining.
-Developer temperature did not yield any obvious differences when using platinum toner. Yeilds a neutral gray. More testing may be required.
-Developer temperature may influence the final color of gold toned (231) prints. Room temp may yeild blue black prints. Hot developer may yeild purple to purple pink prints. More testing is required.
-Using citric acid to clear after developing in sodium acetate causes the print to go orange brown. I don't know if I used too much citric acid or if there was some other processing error.
-Some of my prints appear to become slightly less brown after a few days. Maybe fluctuations in air humidity is causing paper fibers to settle? I have no explanation and I could be imagining things.
My personal thoughts:
-The color of the prints after development is a result of the structure and size of the silver particles in the paper. Even though this silver is getting replaced by the palladium I think that how the new metal gets layed down is influenced by that original structure and density.
-This process is a pain and using a different developer (perhaps sodium citrate?) would be far easier if warm prints are the objective.
-Sodium acetate developer and how it "ripens" is annoying to work with for consistant results.
-Vandyke Brown or Argyrotype prints may be easier to work with and give more consistant results (no developer).
-"Ripened" sodium acetate developer at room temp toned in palladium could be a great way to get neutral prints without paying extra for platinum.
-I will be changing my developer or process once I use up my stock of chemestry.