By the time I began using Agfa warm tone papers Portriga Rapid was down to one surface and a few grades, it did have an off-white creamy emulsion or base colour which may well have come from the addition of a brown dye. It was once common to sell variations of a paper, a good example would be Kodak Bromesko, which in 1961 was available in
"Fifteen tint/surface/texture combinations." (Kodak advert B.J.Photography Almanac 1961, that's 2 more than in a similar advert for 1954.
The important word there is "Tint" because that was one way to give a richer looking warm-tone look. Some people try and emulate this by giving a print a short soak in dilute tea or similar.
Ian,
What do you consider it to be the "ultimate" or "standard" warm tone emulsion, and Why? Which exact paper do you feel can/could not be duplicated without the Cd?
Can you specify exactly what qualities it is you feel are unattainable w/o cadmium? It is not clear to me what you are actually saying... some exact tone or hue could not be obtained? The toned end-result was never identical?
Also, to which paper are we comparing the Cd free emulsions to?
Portrigra? If so, which one and which grade?
Ray
Ray, I've not had the chance to find the "ultimate" or "standard" warm-toned emulsion, that may have been something like Gevaluxe, manufactured by Gevaert, but the era of the rich warm-tone papers had passed by the time I became seriously involved with photography.
The closest paper was Agfa Record Rapid, in the 80's. This was an extremely flexible paper, it exhibited all the classic features of an old fashioned warm-toned chloro-bromide emulsion. It has a good white base, gave clean whites, so had no dye incorporated.
Those features were:
Excellent tonal range.
Very responsive to different types of developer, cold tone, warm tome, soft working, etc.
Capable of a very wide shift in image colour without toning
Responds well to use of exposure/development to change image colour
Predictable, repeatable results.
Perhaps the most important of those was the degree of control using exposure & development time. If you look at a developer Formula like Ilford ID-4 or Gevaert.262 times are listed for Warm black, through Sepia, Red-brown to Red but exposures had to be increased substantially, development times cut, or developers heavily diluted and often additional bromide added.
So what these papers had was flexibility. That changed at the end of the 80's when Cadmium had to be removed from the papers. Record Rapid was re-formulated, Agfa did a good job in getting relatively close to the old version but a part of the flexibility was lost.
The new version wasn't capable of the very wide colour shifts
Was less responsive to exposure and development controls
Prints on the new version couldn't reproduce the same tonal range/image colour.
Overall the paper was less warm-toned.
The new Record Rapid was good but subtlety different, put two prints side by side one made with the old version and the other with the new (final) version and there is a perceptible change in the balance of tonal range/image colour, a slight richness is lost. The differences really have to be seen they are quite difficult to describe.
Agfa finally replaced Record Rapid with Multicontrast Classic (MCC) which was an excellent variable contrast replacement. No longer called a warm-tone paper it still had a reasonable degree of flexibility.
Other warm-ton papers I used occasionally like Kentmere Kentona also changed significantly after the removal of Cadmium.
There are still people out there with the right knowledge trying to keep good papers on the market and bring out new ones. Guy Gerard of Bergger for instance, has the expertise from his time at Guilleminot and used this in conjunction with Forte to produce excellent papers, which lead to improvements in Polywarmtone making it a very popular paper. Bergger are now working with Ilford. Others like Wolfgang Moersch and Mirko Böddecker have worked closely with a number of companies including Ilford/Harman Technologies. Mirko in particular with EFKE, Forte (before closure), Ilford and also with equipment bought from the liquidators of Agfa resurrecting papers and films previously made by Agfa.
There are currently 3 key coating facilities in Europe, Ilford, Foma and EFKE all with flexibility and and the ability to make great B&W papers. This years has seen the introduction of new warm tone papers:
Adox Fine Print Variotone, (made for Adox by Ilford)
Bergger Prestige fibre based papers - warm tone (made by Ilford for Bergger)
Fomatone Natural 532 II, a replacement for a discontinue paper
Adox MCC - first test batch - replace Agfa MCC (coated in Germany)
(Adox MCP - RC paper Neutral/Warmtone - coated in Germany)
These join a variety of other warm tone papers currently produced by Ilford, Kentmere, Foma and EFKE.
Ultimately we have to use what's now available, all these modern papers are different. You have to adapt your techniques and move on.
Ian