When I'm printing platinum, I always measure the relative humidity in the room and the paper humidity before coating and before UV exposure.
My usual settings are:
Room humidity: 50-70%
Paper humidity before coating: 7-8%
Paper humidity before exposure and development: around 15%
With these settings, I'm getting rich blacks with the mix of Palladium Solution #3 + Sodium Platinum Solution (Na2) 5% in a ratio of 20:1.
I usually print a single print in one session. Sometimes I repeat the process if I'm not satisfied with the results.
Today, for the first time, I had prepared digital 6 negatives to print. The room was at around 65% humidity, the paper before coating was around 7%, but when I started developing, with 10-15 minutes between each print, the paper started drying, so I started at around 15% for the first print and ended up at 7% with the last print around 1.5-2 hours later. I noticed that with each print, the blacks are less and less deep. The first one was as I was expecting it to be, really deep blacks (as much as it can be on platinum prints), like I'm used to on my previous prints, but then all the other prints are kinda faded. Even the second print with 12% humidity has noticeably brighter blacks.
I'm wondering, could it be that the humidity of the paper affects blacks this much? I'd like to hear your experiences and make sure that this is the possibility of why the other 5 prints turned out faded. I'll repeat the process tomorrow again for these 5 prints, making sure that I'm exposing it always at around 15% humidity.
Bonus question: What is the best way to dampen the coated paper to increase the humidity by just a few percent? Steamed bathroom?
My usual settings are:
Room humidity: 50-70%
Paper humidity before coating: 7-8%
Paper humidity before exposure and development: around 15%
With these settings, I'm getting rich blacks with the mix of Palladium Solution #3 + Sodium Platinum Solution (Na2) 5% in a ratio of 20:1.
I usually print a single print in one session. Sometimes I repeat the process if I'm not satisfied with the results.
Today, for the first time, I had prepared digital 6 negatives to print. The room was at around 65% humidity, the paper before coating was around 7%, but when I started developing, with 10-15 minutes between each print, the paper started drying, so I started at around 15% for the first print and ended up at 7% with the last print around 1.5-2 hours later. I noticed that with each print, the blacks are less and less deep. The first one was as I was expecting it to be, really deep blacks (as much as it can be on platinum prints), like I'm used to on my previous prints, but then all the other prints are kinda faded. Even the second print with 12% humidity has noticeably brighter blacks.
I'm wondering, could it be that the humidity of the paper affects blacks this much? I'd like to hear your experiences and make sure that this is the possibility of why the other 5 prints turned out faded. I'll repeat the process tomorrow again for these 5 prints, making sure that I'm exposing it always at around 15% humidity.
Bonus question: What is the best way to dampen the coated paper to increase the humidity by just a few percent? Steamed bathroom?

