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...I assume it lives on decanted but
maybe there's a reason to use fresh toner for
each print session. I see nothing in the literature
either way, so I turn to the experts. Thoughts?
Just a word of warning which so far no-one has mentioned. If this toner is of the sulphide variety as opposed to Thiourea then Tim Rudman in his book on toning warns quite strongly against using it in a room where you store unexposed paper due to its propensity to fog paper. Tim is not the kind to issue warnings unless there is a good basis for so doing.
pentaxuser
Sanders... You can re-use both the bleach AND the sepia toner. They both have a lot of life. I am using one kit right now that's been going for nearly 5 months!!!
Which is Kodak Brown Toner?
My experience too, I have used months old sepia toner without issues too. It is of the two step bleach / redevelop type (ferricyanide/odourless thiourea). I don't know about the two step version with smelly sulphide, nor about the polysulfide one bath sepia toners, but see little reason why they should be tossed immediately after use either if kept properly.
Is it just out of habit or anxiety that a few others here insist on using it one-shot only, or maybe a bit overzealous archival requirements (a bit strange in the light of considering sepia toning is probably already one of the most archival treatments)?
Marco
When working on large projects I like the repeatability of fresh chems. I like them to react the same each time without considering extending times for the bleach step which is not a very precise visual experience.
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