Hi everyone,
I'm wondering if anyone has been able to tease out a "tan" warmth from Ilford's warmtone paper? I've tried selenium, sulfide, thiocarbamide, polysulphide, as well as different warmtone developers with short developing times, weak dilutions, warmtone additives, heated solutions, bleach/redevelopment in warmtone developers, etc and I haven't had much luck.
I'm trying to maintain a black and white look but with a tan warmth - not yellow or red/brown - rather than an olive warmth. Is it even possible or should I be looking at different papers or processes?
Any thoughts would be greatly appreciated!
Michael
I'm wondering if anyone has been able to tease out a "tan" warmth from Ilford's warmtone paper? I've tried selenium, sulfide, thiocarbamide, polysulphide, as well as different warmtone developers with short developing times, weak dilutions, warmtone additives, heated solutions, bleach/redevelopment in warmtone developers, etc and I haven't had much luck.
I'm trying to maintain a black and white look but with a tan warmth - not yellow or red/brown - rather than an olive warmth. Is it even possible or should I be looking at different papers or processes?
Any thoughts would be greatly appreciated!
Michael

). There was a total of 56 prints ... 14 each of four negatives. He wanted sharp borders and for each print of an image to be identical. I was successful in pleasing him and was paid in prints ... 4 printer's proofs and 3 sets of numbered prints. If I ever sell them it will be well worth it but for now it was an interesting experience and I guess good for a resume.