What is paper flashing?
Paper flashing is exposing paper to raw, non image forming light. The theory is that it takes a certain amount of exposure before your paper will record tone. You can determine that by exposing a test strip of your paper under your enlarger, then develop it and determine the maximum amount of time you can expose it before it records tonality - that is your paper threshold. For the paper I use, its 10 seconds at f16 at a height of 40 on my beseler 23c with 50mm lens. I like to find a time that I can vary if I don't want to flash fully.
What is it used for, and when would a person want to employ it?
It is generally used when you want to lessen the contrast of paper(usually when using graded paper). I.e - if you have highlight areas that are hard to print.
What are good techniques for doing it?
All you need is a controllable, repeatable light source - here's what I do. I have 2 enlargers, side by side in my darkroom. A beseler 23c and an omega 5x7 that I do most of my printing with. They are both hooked up to a common timer. This way I can leave the neg in the 5x7 and flash with the beseler. If you only have 1 enlarger, you can pre flash a bunch of paper ahead of time before you start printing.
Hope thishelps.
Tim
Many thanks for the advice, all...