Orangey toner?

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Les McLean

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Try sepia then gold, I know that Ilford Warmtone will produce orange/red. I would think that Forte or Agfa would also produce similar results.
 

ann

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Try hypo alum then blue gold on Forte Ploygrade warmtone plus. You will get an interesting orange/red.
 

Ole

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Or you could try the yellow titanium toner in the Colorvir kits. I believe the active ingredient is Titanium oxychloride. Gives very warm yellows.

Copper toning can give orangey tones, or FSA toning (which I intend to play with this winter).
 

Donald Miller

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Berg Brown Copper toner can give an almost orange color with some papers. Additionally some nice effects (albeit not repeatable) can be obtained by toning in copper and redeveloping. The image tone will split out in some unusual and attractive ways.
 

FrankB

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This is not strictly toning but...

Staining with tea can give anything from a creamy yellow through to a more orangey hue. Colour shift varies with the paper, strength and temperature of tea and length of time in the solution.

Note that this affects all of the paper i.e. the border will *not* remain white!

All the best,

Frank

P.S. Trust a Brit to suggest this one, eh?!
 

Black Dog

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I'll second that tip about FSA-you can find all sorts of toning formulae in the Darkroom Cookbook. Also Tim Rudman wrote a whole book on toning-published by Argentum. Another possibility is lith printing-happy experimenting!
 

ann

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just a gentle reminder. Neither tea or copper is archival.
 

Lex Jenkins

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Tea is probably not archival for the paper substrate but the tannic acid is considered to be a useful hardener for the gelatin emulsion. No worse than alum, possibly better.

I've gotten some nice colors using coffee or tea on fiber prints but it looks awful on the RC prints I've tested. Looks like a dog peed on the prints.
 
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