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- Oct 17, 2007
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Last night I made my first Pt/Pd calibration prints and I am hoping to get some advice from the forum. So far you have been very helpful.
This is my first foray into alternative processes - and I havent made a wet print in probably 7 years.
I am using a Pt/Pd mix with medium contrast - my drops for a 6x8 are:
Ferric Oxalate #1: 8 drops
Ferric Oxalate #2: 8 drops
Pd Soln: 12 drops
Pt Soln: 4 drops
Firstly I established my base exposure as 8 minutes on a 3M UV Exposure Unit using a step wedge. Next I printed an RNP HSL chart onto Pictorico Premium OHP using a HP 9180 on "HP Advanced Photo Glossy" & Best quality. Here's the result:
View attachment 189
The X on the left shows the color I picked for my negative base. It turns out to be HSL=(0,95,100) or RGB=255,12,12. There were many choices judging by the result - but I picked this one based on Sandy King's recent recommendation that RGB-(255,0,12) was working well for him on the HP9180 in terms of a smooth transition.
Next I created a ChartThrob Step wedge with the base color, printed and scanned. Here is the result:
View attachment 190
The first three steps are pure white and then it goes to Dmax at around 50%. This is reflected in the curve created by ChartThrob:
View attachment 191
In addition ChartThrob tells me that while this is a valid curve, I might want to consider reducing my exposure to make more optimal use of the paper/emulsion.
So, here are my questions:
Any advice on where to go from here would be very welcome.
Just for fun, and because I had some spare coated paper not needed for testing last night, I printed a neg from my 1956 Rolleiflex - this is using the same 8 min exposure on the same emulsion as my test prints. And this was an average density negative:
View attachment 192
I am happy with the result for a 2 1/4" square print - my first real Pt/Pd print. I am hoping that I will be able to get these types of tones from diginegs when I finally get there. Will I be disappointed?
Thanks again,
Richard
This is my first foray into alternative processes - and I havent made a wet print in probably 7 years.
I am using a Pt/Pd mix with medium contrast - my drops for a 6x8 are:
Ferric Oxalate #1: 8 drops
Ferric Oxalate #2: 8 drops
Pd Soln: 12 drops
Pt Soln: 4 drops
Firstly I established my base exposure as 8 minutes on a 3M UV Exposure Unit using a step wedge. Next I printed an RNP HSL chart onto Pictorico Premium OHP using a HP 9180 on "HP Advanced Photo Glossy" & Best quality. Here's the result:
View attachment 189
The X on the left shows the color I picked for my negative base. It turns out to be HSL=(0,95,100) or RGB=255,12,12. There were many choices judging by the result - but I picked this one based on Sandy King's recent recommendation that RGB-(255,0,12) was working well for him on the HP9180 in terms of a smooth transition.
Next I created a ChartThrob Step wedge with the base color, printed and scanned. Here is the result:
View attachment 190
The first three steps are pure white and then it goes to Dmax at around 50%. This is reflected in the curve created by ChartThrob:
View attachment 191
In addition ChartThrob tells me that while this is a valid curve, I might want to consider reducing my exposure to make more optimal use of the paper/emulsion.
So, here are my questions:
- How does my HSL array look? I notice that other ones posted seem to have a more gradual transtion from light to dark - mine seems more abrupt.
- Given than my first ChartThrob test shows me achieving Dmax at 50% should I consider reducing the contrast of the emulsion. Wouldn't that be better that using a curve that maps my 256 inputs to only about 128 outputs? Does that matter?
- I notice quite a bit of dithering on my step wedge. Is that indicative of what large areas of midtone will look like on my final print? I had the impression that diginegs (done well) don't show these artifacts. However, I do see them on other peoples test charts - just not on their final prints. Is that just because the final prints are less magnfied and the dithering is still visible?
Any advice on where to go from here would be very welcome.
Just for fun, and because I had some spare coated paper not needed for testing last night, I printed a neg from my 1956 Rolleiflex - this is using the same 8 min exposure on the same emulsion as my test prints. And this was an average density negative:
View attachment 192
I am happy with the result for a 2 1/4" square print - my first real Pt/Pd print. I am hoping that I will be able to get these types of tones from diginegs when I finally get there. Will I be disappointed?
Thanks again,
Richard

