stradibarrius
Member
If I have old brown from one "lith" developer can I mix it with old brown from a different lith developer. I'm guessing "non" but I thought I would ask anyway.
I never worry about this, and have mixed two different old browns on many occasions with results I have expected.
I will say that if you are using the same tray for Dektol and Lith which I do , it is very important to rinse the trays well between developers. I have had real problems not rinsing Dektol out before lith printing.
Not rinsing well enough the tray. That just happened to me this week. Very frustrating !
I know you can't speak french !!!!!
I will have a show in Paris in november. Perfect timing.
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The confusion reins with the last 5 years use of the term "lith".
If you mean 'real' lith developer like mix part A (usually developing agent and preservative) wih Part B (usally alkali - and a strong one at that) and use it within the first 15-30 or so minutes of combining the A+B before it goes brown, then we are talking Lith film with blacks black as can be and clear white - no greys. You can't reuse this developer.
If you mean the modern 'Artiste' meaning of the word Lith, where you massively overexpose a print, and then plunk it into weak, aged, mungy old developer, and yank it from the developer at just the precise moment that infectious development begins, and not a second too late, then, yes, it may be a reasonable prospect to combine aged developer.
Lith of this sort is usually never repeatable, so creating a unique and non repaetable developer mix should not be an impediment to trying the same thing later on.
There should be no confusion in this post. When someone says "lith" developer, especially with "old brown" as part of the post, it is very clear what they are talking about.
Lithographic developer is called just that, or, more often, "A/B" or "A+B", or just "developer" if you are talking to fellow lithographic printers, in whose company it can be assumed you are not talking about any other sort of developer.
The confusion reins with the last 5 years use of the term "lith".
If you mean 'real' lith developer like mix part A (usually developing agent and preservative) wih Part B (usally alkali - and a strong one at that) and use it within the first 15-30 or so minutes of combining the A+B before it goes brown, then we are talking Lith film with blacks black as can be and clear white - no greys. You can't reuse this developer.
If you mean the modern 'Artiste' meaning of the word Lith, where you massively overexpose a print, and then plunk it into weak, aged, mungy old developer, and yank it from the developer at just the precise moment that infectious development begins, and not a second too late, then, yes, it may be a reasonable prospect to combine aged developer.
Lith of this sort is usually never repeatable, so creating a unique and non repaetable developer mix should not be an impediment to trying the same thing later on.
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