I know there are some work arounds for the snowballing effect of modern Foma papers (like pre-soaking the paper before it goes into the lith developer)
The Facebook group on lith printing is a good resource, but I'd like to create a website or wiki that people could contribute to so that all the information is in one place.
Thanks! Waiting for my Fomatone to be deliveredNeutral tone VC papers often lith very coarsely or not at all. I'm not surprised you ran into trouble with foma 112. You might get something usable by tweaking the processing parameters (exposure & developer additives & development time), but fomatone is just a whole lot easier to lith.
Just out of curiosity but I take it that despite Ilford RC Deluxe being an improvement in several way over MGRCIV paper it still doesn't lith or not very well?
I haven't tried but I assume that it doesn't. First of all I think lithable papers are all fiber based?
I think there have been RC papers which lith too. My memory might glorify the past, but I think there was a Fomatone RC paper which did lith very well. So I would not just rule out RC papers.
One try for papers which do not lith well or do not lith at all is to over expose a bit and process in normal developer, fix and wash, then bleach, wash and redevelop in lith developer.
I think most of the bleaches will do. Goal is to get silver halides back. But the kind of bleach influences the colors you get in the final print. There is a book about lith printing by Tim Rudman. Actually there are two, but I remember that The Master Photographer‘s Lith Printing Course has a whole chapter about second pass lith with a lot of images demonstrating the effect. Tim Rudman also has a news letter where he publishes news about papers working for lith and more. Just look at his web page: http://www.timrudman.com
@vedostuu take a look at the website of Wolfgang Moersch
https://www.moersch-photochemie.de/content/knowhow
I don't know about your german skills (an easy one for me), but there is a lot of information - also about second pass lith and other techniques. At least one of the best resources if you're on a budget.
@vedostuu And if you search for second pass lith print you will also get quite a bit of info. E.g. http://twelvesmallsquares.blogspot.com/2013/06/how-to-create-2nd-pass-lith-prints.html
And you are right, the book I mentioned is quite pricy, I am surprised. When I bought it in 2007 it was just 27€. What is called for it now is insane. I would contact sellers and see if they are able to lower the price. Sometimes it is better to sell something at a lower price instead of … not sell it.
Cheers
Rüdiger
I haven't tried but I assume that it doesn't. First of all I think lithable papers are all fiber based?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?