Local darkening as opposed to Bleaching

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hello everyone,

Does someone know a way to locally darken some spots, regions and how to do that?
 

Sirius Glass

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Using localized burning.
 

Sirius Glass

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One could take developer in a sponge and locally sponge to darken. Then using a sponge with water to slow down or stop the development before deciding whether to continue.
 
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One could take developer in a sponge and locally sponge to darken. Then using a sponge with water to slow down or stop the development before deciding whether to continue.
Sirius,
Thanks , are there people here he have more experience with this 'method'?
 

AZD

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For those willing to get developer on their hands, using your fingers to warm an area will increase development. I don’t normally do this, but it has saved a few prints when I could see some additional burning would’ve helped but clearly it was too late. I haven’t tested the limits of this technique but it often works in a pinch.
 
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For those willing to get developer on their hands, using your fingers to warm an area will increase development. I don’t normally do this, but it has saved a few prints when I could see some additional burning would’ve helped but clearly it was too late. I haven’t tested the limits of this technique but it often works in a pinch.

Thx AZD
 

MattKing

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You can also use something like a small sponge and warmed developer in a beaker - we used to do that when we were working under deadline in a newspaper darkroom.
It works, but the prints don't necessarily look pretty afterwards, as the image tone can be uneven, and the affect can appear unnatural.
 

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I remember reading Gene Smith using warm liquid developer and a Q-tip. Works well, I use a cup warmer to keep it warm.
 

MattKing

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Sirius Glass

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what's a newspaper?🧐

Something we would put on the floor when house training a dog or under and around cat boxes to make it easier to clean up the kitty litter that was kicked out of the cat boxes.
 
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