I indeed proceed as Doremus : from fixer (Ilford Rapid Fix 1+9), I go straight to Selenium toner. After toner to washaid, then wash.
As to washing, with the new Classic emulsion, I wash the prints for 10minutes in a print washer.
But I am going to try the following for washing : Leave the prints in a tray (no running water) for 5 to 10 minutes, and change 4 times. Apparently as efficient, but with less water consumption.
What are your thoughts on this ?
Henk,
I would think that 10 minutes for a fiber-base paper might be too short...
An HT-2 test will tell the tale.
Whatever washing method we decide to use for fiber-base papers, we can easily test it's efficiency with the good old retained hypo test (I think unblinkingeye.com even has pdfs of the comparison strips). Calibrate your wash once by doing a series of prints (blank developed and fixed sheets) and pulling the first one long before adequate washing has been reached (so you'll definitely have some stain with the HT-2 test). Do test edges and centers, or the whole sheet as Kodak recommends. Pull others in 10-minute intervals or so and test till you find the one with no stain anywhere. Add a safety factor and you've got your basic wash set up. Then, test the last print through every session (or run a blank test print, even better) as a control. Peace of mind is way worth the trouble. There's no reason why successive soaks in fresh water should not yield a well-washed print; you just have to find the right number of changes and the right soak times.
FWIW, my comments on the Ilford wash sequence for minimum water use linked to above. For reference it is:
Fixation ILFORD RAPID FIXER (1+4) or HYPAM (1+4) 1min
First wash Fresh, running water 5min
ILFORD WASHAID (1+4) intermittent agitation 10min
Final wash Fresh, running water 5min
This method is based on using film-strength fixer for a short period of time. This fixes the emulsion without soaking into the paper base (as far...). Ilford tested this with their papers and, with careful time and capacity controls, it works.
However (and it's a big however), fixer capacity is
greatly reduced (Ilford says 10 8x10-inch prints per liter!). Two-bath fixing with 1+4-strength fixer becomes problematic: how do you deal with drain times? Ignore them? No this would add more time to the total a print is exposed to fixer, thus saturating the paper base more. So, one minute in two baths including drain times? I can't even drain a 16x20 print twice in 30 seconds. That would leave less than 15 seconds per fixing bath; just not practical for me. And, what if you end up taking more time than 60 seconds from the time the print hits the fix till it hits the running water wash? How much leeway is there in this process? I read somewhere that the paper base on most papers becomes completely saturated at the 90 second mark. That means there would be only 30 seconds to play with. But, if you fix for 1'15", how much longer should you wash? Certainly, 90 seconds total eliminates any advantage to this method and makes one wash a lot longer. And, we can't be sure that Ilford's method works with other manufacturer's papers (at least without testing, which we should do anyway...).
The upshot of this for me is: I use Rapid Fix 1+9, two bath, 1.5min. in each (or a bit longer if you include drain times). I get 36 8x10s per liter of bath one before I discard it and replace it with bath two. This saves me a lot of fixer expense, some of which I can spend on water to wash my prints longer with.
Paper is expensive and the time, expertise and effort needed to make a beautiful print is worth the time and expense of finding a wash method that yields well-washed prints. I wash in vertical "archival" washers for a minimum of 60 minutes after a treatment in a wash-aid. This is likely a bit longer than needed, but part of my goal is to get rid of as much of the optical brighteners as possible before damaging the print with a too-long wash. (I much prefer the look of natural, unbrightened paper white; brighteners make the whites look artificial to me. 90% of them are gone after an hour wash).
Bottom line, test your wash sequence with your equipment, materials and methods. It's easy and takes the guesswork out of the mix.
Best,
Doremus