- Joined
- Jun 4, 2008
- Messages
- 39
- Format
- 35mm RF
All
I tried lith printing this weekend. Had a lot of fun and great success. Used Fomatone 131 FB Glossy paper, Fotospeed lith developer diluted 1:19, and got 9 8x10s printed in the session. Peachy/Brown results - really interesting. Development times were about 5-6 minutes for the first 6 prints, then things got slower and by the time I did the 9th print it took 16 minutes. 3 of the prints are very good and I set those aside. I then took a few of the less good ones and tried some toning.
In both Selenium and Sepia the highlights disapeared nearly completely! This of course was not what I was expecting from reading Rudman's book. The shadows also were significantly lightened, but they do still exist. The selenium was 1:10. The bleach for the toner was 1:19.
Thoughts? The only thing I can think of is that I was reading Rudman's book (first one - "Master Photographer's Printing Course") and it said that toning can "sometimes reveal a base fog that wasn't evident before" (I'm paraphrasing). It is conceivable that the longer development times could induce such a fog. Also, my method for finding the snatch point was that once I saw the image coming I physically moved the development tray itself to a table under my safelight where I also have the water bath for the prints already done. The idea in doing so was to have reference prints right next to the one I'm developing so that I get a more accurate snatch point. Please note the safelight is Red and it is still probably 3-4 feet away from the tray.
Anyone have any ideas...have you seen or heard about this before?
If I can't figure it out it isn't too big of a problem...I love the way the prints look without toning...but toning could even perhaps make them better.
I tried lith printing this weekend. Had a lot of fun and great success. Used Fomatone 131 FB Glossy paper, Fotospeed lith developer diluted 1:19, and got 9 8x10s printed in the session. Peachy/Brown results - really interesting. Development times were about 5-6 minutes for the first 6 prints, then things got slower and by the time I did the 9th print it took 16 minutes. 3 of the prints are very good and I set those aside. I then took a few of the less good ones and tried some toning.
In both Selenium and Sepia the highlights disapeared nearly completely! This of course was not what I was expecting from reading Rudman's book. The shadows also were significantly lightened, but they do still exist. The selenium was 1:10. The bleach for the toner was 1:19.
Thoughts? The only thing I can think of is that I was reading Rudman's book (first one - "Master Photographer's Printing Course") and it said that toning can "sometimes reveal a base fog that wasn't evident before" (I'm paraphrasing). It is conceivable that the longer development times could induce such a fog. Also, my method for finding the snatch point was that once I saw the image coming I physically moved the development tray itself to a table under my safelight where I also have the water bath for the prints already done. The idea in doing so was to have reference prints right next to the one I'm developing so that I get a more accurate snatch point. Please note the safelight is Red and it is still probably 3-4 feet away from the tray.
Anyone have any ideas...have you seen or heard about this before?
If I can't figure it out it isn't too big of a problem...I love the way the prints look without toning...but toning could even perhaps make them better.

