Marco B
Subscriber
Hi all,
Lately, I have tried to sepia tone a number of liquid emulsion prints (Rollie Black Magic VC). The toner I used is Amaloco T-10 Sepiton, a dutch product of which I am not to sure others know about or if it's sold outside the Netherlands. Unfortunately, the exact contents of this toner is not mentioned on the package. However, it is a two bath system, and it does mention ferricyanide and sodiumhydroxide for the first and second bath respectively. Based on some research I've done on the internet, I know suspect, or almost know for sure, that it is a thiourea based sepia toner, since the other two types of sepia toner either are not odourless and single bath (sodium sulphide based sepia toners), or can not be combined with any alkaline solution like the sodium hydroxide in the second bath, since that would destroy it (metal ferricyanide toners - copper based for sepia). So it's most likely a thiourea based toner.
Anyway, the problem I've seen turning up is that metalic / silvery stains appear in the *most dense/dark parts* of the sepia toned prints, so those parts of the original photo that had the deepest blacks. Actually, although I'm pretty sure I've stayed below the stated capacity of the toner (in terms of square meters), I am suspecting I may simply have exhausted the toning bath (the second sodium hydroxide / thiourea bath). Toning times were already rising, and I may simply not have fully toned all bleached silver. Many of my prints are also very dark, so requiring a lot of the toning bath...
Is this indeed possible??? Or am I talking complete nonsense here? Does untoned, but bleached silver, turn into a visible metalic layer on sepia toned images when the toning bath is exhausted? And if not, does anyone know the real cause of these metalic / silvery stains?
Thanks for any info!
Marco
Lately, I have tried to sepia tone a number of liquid emulsion prints (Rollie Black Magic VC). The toner I used is Amaloco T-10 Sepiton, a dutch product of which I am not to sure others know about or if it's sold outside the Netherlands. Unfortunately, the exact contents of this toner is not mentioned on the package. However, it is a two bath system, and it does mention ferricyanide and sodiumhydroxide for the first and second bath respectively. Based on some research I've done on the internet, I know suspect, or almost know for sure, that it is a thiourea based sepia toner, since the other two types of sepia toner either are not odourless and single bath (sodium sulphide based sepia toners), or can not be combined with any alkaline solution like the sodium hydroxide in the second bath, since that would destroy it (metal ferricyanide toners - copper based for sepia). So it's most likely a thiourea based toner.
Anyway, the problem I've seen turning up is that metalic / silvery stains appear in the *most dense/dark parts* of the sepia toned prints, so those parts of the original photo that had the deepest blacks. Actually, although I'm pretty sure I've stayed below the stated capacity of the toner (in terms of square meters), I am suspecting I may simply have exhausted the toning bath (the second sodium hydroxide / thiourea bath). Toning times were already rising, and I may simply not have fully toned all bleached silver. Many of my prints are also very dark, so requiring a lot of the toning bath...
Is this indeed possible??? Or am I talking complete nonsense here? Does untoned, but bleached silver, turn into a visible metalic layer on sepia toned images when the toning bath is exhausted? And if not, does anyone know the real cause of these metalic / silvery stains?
Thanks for any info!
Marco