Hey everyone--
TL;DR version: I can't even get a test strip for finding optimal UV exposure time through film base to work properly, and I have exhausted all of the troubleshooting avenues I could think of.
I am trying to “graduate” from salt prints to kallitypes. I’ve gotten good results with salt prints on a Strathmore hot press watercolor paper, using Fixxons film. This is with a home built UV exposure box, which is a bunch of UV LED strip lights about 6” or so above the contact printing frame. With that setup, I reach dmax for my salt prints through the film in 12 minutes of exposure time. When I did the tests to find that time, the strip was very clearly demarcated at all the sections of different exposure
For kallitypes, I decided to just shell out for Hahnemuhle Platinum Rag and Pictorico transparency film since it’s supposed to be a tried-and-true combo.
I am following Sandy King’s instructions and chemistry recipes to a tee, using the #1 gold toner (the one without thiourea, just gold chloride, citric acid, and distilled water). I am working under a 40W equivalent LED yellow bug light. My tap water is slightly alkaline, so I’m using distilled for all solutions, and a gallon jug of tap water mixed with enough citric acid to reach a pH of 6.5 for rinsing.
My first few tests were with 20% ferric oxalate I got from The Photographers Formulary. I ordered a bottle of dry ferric oxalate intending to mix my own since it doesn't keep well in solution, and I'm a low-volume printer. Before shipping it, they reached out to me to say they were discontinuing the dry product and the only stuff they had on hand was ~20 years old. They kindly offered to substitute in an equivalent amount of already mixed 20% solution, and toss in the dry stuff for free.
The ferric oxalate solution they sent was fairly green and a little cloudy. When mixed with the 10% silver nitrate in a shot glass, the solution looked slightly grayish and not very transparent before even coating the paper. I coated the paper with a glass puddle pusher (same as I have been using successfully for salt printing). The first test was almost immediately fogged and basically turned very dark as soon as I tried to do a “test strip” to find the right exposure time, even without developing. I also couldn’t see much by way of separation between the differently exposed areas. 20 minutes of UV light was about the same darkness pre- and post- development as 2 minutes of UV light. Not wanting to waste toner, I just chucked the test strip after rinsing. The entire thing was a pretty homogeneous muddy brown.
Suspecting my bug light first, I did my next test with only red safe lights that I use regularly for silver gelatin printing. Same result, basically complete failure. Some research led me to believe it was probably bad ferric oxalate solution (old or otherwise containing unacceptable amounts of ferrous oxalate, oxalic acid, or both). I mixed up my own 20% solution with hot distilled water and the dry stuff from TFP. The dry stuff was in the form of fairly large, very bright fluorescent green crystals. Not a great sign. Sure enough, it never really fully went into solution for more than a couple of minutes at a time. Always had crystals precipitating out. I never bothered trying a test strip with this.
Went ahead and ordered some powdered ferric oxalate from Bostick and Sullivan. It showed up as a very fine powder that was dull greenish yellow in color. Seemed much better. I mixed up a 20% solution in a new brown glass dropper bottle using boiling hot distilled water, per enclosed B&S instructions. It went into solution great, and 12 hours later I tried another test strip.
Coated the paper under yellow bug light and let it dry for 30 minutes in darkness. Totally dry to the touch. No fogging, which was encouraging.
Tested 2 minute exposure intervals from 2 minutes through 20 minutes in the UV box. Prior to development there was a pretty clear gradient visible on the paper. Darker tones than I expected for undeveloped kallitype, but I proceeded anyway. Unfortunately, once developed in sodium citrate, this demarcation went away and basically the entire sheet is a mottled dark brown again. This time I followed through the entire process of rinsing, clearing, toning, fixing, hypo, 30 minute wash, and drying to see if the test strip improved. It did not. The finished dry product is pretty much homogeneous, with a fairly neutral, slightly bluish dark gray covering the entire paper and almost no visible differences between differently exposed areas.
Not sure where to troubleshoot next. Suggestions welcome. I’ve seen some really beautiful kallitypes and would love to be able to successfully make my own. Help a newbie out?
TL;DR version: I can't even get a test strip for finding optimal UV exposure time through film base to work properly, and I have exhausted all of the troubleshooting avenues I could think of.
I am trying to “graduate” from salt prints to kallitypes. I’ve gotten good results with salt prints on a Strathmore hot press watercolor paper, using Fixxons film. This is with a home built UV exposure box, which is a bunch of UV LED strip lights about 6” or so above the contact printing frame. With that setup, I reach dmax for my salt prints through the film in 12 minutes of exposure time. When I did the tests to find that time, the strip was very clearly demarcated at all the sections of different exposure
For kallitypes, I decided to just shell out for Hahnemuhle Platinum Rag and Pictorico transparency film since it’s supposed to be a tried-and-true combo.
I am following Sandy King’s instructions and chemistry recipes to a tee, using the #1 gold toner (the one without thiourea, just gold chloride, citric acid, and distilled water). I am working under a 40W equivalent LED yellow bug light. My tap water is slightly alkaline, so I’m using distilled for all solutions, and a gallon jug of tap water mixed with enough citric acid to reach a pH of 6.5 for rinsing.
My first few tests were with 20% ferric oxalate I got from The Photographers Formulary. I ordered a bottle of dry ferric oxalate intending to mix my own since it doesn't keep well in solution, and I'm a low-volume printer. Before shipping it, they reached out to me to say they were discontinuing the dry product and the only stuff they had on hand was ~20 years old. They kindly offered to substitute in an equivalent amount of already mixed 20% solution, and toss in the dry stuff for free.
The ferric oxalate solution they sent was fairly green and a little cloudy. When mixed with the 10% silver nitrate in a shot glass, the solution looked slightly grayish and not very transparent before even coating the paper. I coated the paper with a glass puddle pusher (same as I have been using successfully for salt printing). The first test was almost immediately fogged and basically turned very dark as soon as I tried to do a “test strip” to find the right exposure time, even without developing. I also couldn’t see much by way of separation between the differently exposed areas. 20 minutes of UV light was about the same darkness pre- and post- development as 2 minutes of UV light. Not wanting to waste toner, I just chucked the test strip after rinsing. The entire thing was a pretty homogeneous muddy brown.
Suspecting my bug light first, I did my next test with only red safe lights that I use regularly for silver gelatin printing. Same result, basically complete failure. Some research led me to believe it was probably bad ferric oxalate solution (old or otherwise containing unacceptable amounts of ferrous oxalate, oxalic acid, or both). I mixed up my own 20% solution with hot distilled water and the dry stuff from TFP. The dry stuff was in the form of fairly large, very bright fluorescent green crystals. Not a great sign. Sure enough, it never really fully went into solution for more than a couple of minutes at a time. Always had crystals precipitating out. I never bothered trying a test strip with this.
Went ahead and ordered some powdered ferric oxalate from Bostick and Sullivan. It showed up as a very fine powder that was dull greenish yellow in color. Seemed much better. I mixed up a 20% solution in a new brown glass dropper bottle using boiling hot distilled water, per enclosed B&S instructions. It went into solution great, and 12 hours later I tried another test strip.
Coated the paper under yellow bug light and let it dry for 30 minutes in darkness. Totally dry to the touch. No fogging, which was encouraging.
Tested 2 minute exposure intervals from 2 minutes through 20 minutes in the UV box. Prior to development there was a pretty clear gradient visible on the paper. Darker tones than I expected for undeveloped kallitype, but I proceeded anyway. Unfortunately, once developed in sodium citrate, this demarcation went away and basically the entire sheet is a mottled dark brown again. This time I followed through the entire process of rinsing, clearing, toning, fixing, hypo, 30 minute wash, and drying to see if the test strip improved. It did not. The finished dry product is pretty much homogeneous, with a fairly neutral, slightly bluish dark gray covering the entire paper and almost no visible differences between differently exposed areas.
Not sure where to troubleshoot next. Suggestions welcome. I’ve seen some really beautiful kallitypes and would love to be able to successfully make my own. Help a newbie out?
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