samcomet
Subscriber
I know that this was covered in a previous thread about adding some gloss to matte FB paper (ferrotype and varnish) but the thread was about 10 years old so I thought I would start a new one. Forgive me.
Being in Sydney and in lockdown I have had a chance to read the Zone VI Newsletters a member here has posted some while ago. I came upon and interesting idea that has obviously been around for quite awhile but it was a new one on me (page 905 of 969 or page 8 of the #78 June 1994 edition).
I generally print on Foma FB Matte MG which I find suits my purposes well but being in lockdown I cannot go wandering about town making new photographs. Instead I revisited some of my "also rans" that were not quite up to scratch. Using the mixture, as stated by Fred Picker, of Stand Oil (linseed) and artists' turps (2 tablespoons oil to 8 oz. turps), I've been coating some of these prints and got fantastic results in my high key images. The blacks really pop out and the highlights seem to be unaffected. There is an added sheen from the mixture which is really nice too. I apply the mixture with a sable brush, wait over night and then gently "mop" up the coating with tissue leaving the nice look. I am not sure about the archival-ness of the turps + oil on the prints but instead of hiding them away as works-in-progress, they really do look nice enough to stand on their own. It's quite close to the non-dry down effect or rather the look in a final wash before drying.
At any rate this project is keeping me off the streets for the time being
Cheers all!
Sam
Being in Sydney and in lockdown I have had a chance to read the Zone VI Newsletters a member here has posted some while ago. I came upon and interesting idea that has obviously been around for quite awhile but it was a new one on me (page 905 of 969 or page 8 of the #78 June 1994 edition).
I generally print on Foma FB Matte MG which I find suits my purposes well but being in lockdown I cannot go wandering about town making new photographs. Instead I revisited some of my "also rans" that were not quite up to scratch. Using the mixture, as stated by Fred Picker, of Stand Oil (linseed) and artists' turps (2 tablespoons oil to 8 oz. turps), I've been coating some of these prints and got fantastic results in my high key images. The blacks really pop out and the highlights seem to be unaffected. There is an added sheen from the mixture which is really nice too. I apply the mixture with a sable brush, wait over night and then gently "mop" up the coating with tissue leaving the nice look. I am not sure about the archival-ness of the turps + oil on the prints but instead of hiding them away as works-in-progress, they really do look nice enough to stand on their own. It's quite close to the non-dry down effect or rather the look in a final wash before drying.
At any rate this project is keeping me off the streets for the time being

Sam