er1483
Member
- Joined
- May 16, 2006
- Messages
- 11
- Format
- 8x10 Format
Hi everyone,
I've recently decided to try my hand at albumen printing for the first time. Last week my chems arrived from Bostick & Sullivan and begun ironing out my process. I've had good luck getting a nice, even coating of albumen and silver nitrate (via floatation), but I can't seem to get my gold chloride toner to produce any noticeable shift in image colour (it stays that reddish-brown colour, and doesn't shift to the cooler purple-brown as expected).
I can't imagine how the gold toner would be contaminated immediately—I mixed it less than a week before attempting to tone my first print, and have been storing it in a brand new amber bottle.
I've been using the borax-based toner formula quite close to the one described in James Reilly's book, posted online:
http://albumen.conservation-us.org/library/monographs/reilly/chap8.html
25ml 1% gold chloride solution
5 g Borax
475ml distilled water
My process has been to wash the print in a lightly salted water bath solution for 2-3 minutes (as Christopher James recommends in his Alt Process book), then wash in running water for 5+ minutes, and then finally immerse in the gold toner solution (and of course, fix with sodium thiosulfate as the last step).
The paper I'm using is Stonehenge White, the silver nitrate solution is at 15% dilution, and albumen salt I'm using is ammonium chloride. (All my solutions were only mixed this week, so they're fresh and uncontaminated.)
Has anybody else experienced this? What could I be doing wrong? I've searched the net and can't seem to find any complaints about this.
Thanks
Evan
I've recently decided to try my hand at albumen printing for the first time. Last week my chems arrived from Bostick & Sullivan and begun ironing out my process. I've had good luck getting a nice, even coating of albumen and silver nitrate (via floatation), but I can't seem to get my gold chloride toner to produce any noticeable shift in image colour (it stays that reddish-brown colour, and doesn't shift to the cooler purple-brown as expected).
I can't imagine how the gold toner would be contaminated immediately—I mixed it less than a week before attempting to tone my first print, and have been storing it in a brand new amber bottle.
I've been using the borax-based toner formula quite close to the one described in James Reilly's book, posted online:
http://albumen.conservation-us.org/library/monographs/reilly/chap8.html
25ml 1% gold chloride solution
5 g Borax
475ml distilled water
My process has been to wash the print in a lightly salted water bath solution for 2-3 minutes (as Christopher James recommends in his Alt Process book), then wash in running water for 5+ minutes, and then finally immerse in the gold toner solution (and of course, fix with sodium thiosulfate as the last step).
The paper I'm using is Stonehenge White, the silver nitrate solution is at 15% dilution, and albumen salt I'm using is ammonium chloride. (All my solutions were only mixed this week, so they're fresh and uncontaminated.)
Has anybody else experienced this? What could I be doing wrong? I've searched the net and can't seem to find any complaints about this.
Thanks
Evan