I know there are already alot of thread regarding bleaching process but I may ask about my trouble here..
To test bleaching and re-developing process I used the Moersch bleach stock and my own diluted ferricyanide stock.
paper : foma glossy / matt fiber base warm tone
tested with the one developed by dektol and lith printing
1.
I've observed those bleach chemical bleach my prints. Moersch concentrated stock seems pretty strong and with little dilution it bleached the print completely white. Ferrycianide(+water dilution) seem work slower and in the end it does bleach job as well. As I know the bleached part could be re-developed by developer again, so I rinsed bleached prints then tried to redeveloped it. But somehow it doesn't seem developing at all (or very little) and also I observed opposite case : high density area(very black) still remains some stains even though I tried with highly concentrated bleach stock.
I have no idea why I can't redevelop my bleached prints. It wasn't fixated yet, so my work procedure was : bleach > rinse > develop step, and even after a quite long time in the re-developer bath, the bleached area doesn't seem changed at all. What would be the causes?
1) too much bleach would change the grain structure so anyway it wouldn't allow to recover image by redeveloping?
2) probably there might be still some ferrycianide concentrates remains in the paper, so "much much" harder rinse required before redeveloping?
2.
I have additional questions regarding the situation..
1) after bleached the paper appears complete white base though it is branded as warm tone paper..Is it normal? Is there any special bleaching technique or material depending on paper type(warm/normal/glossy/matt)?
2) In case that I do bleach and redevelop my print, can I use different developer for re-developing? Is there anybody has a similar experience? Initially I wanted to try this out(re-develop) that's why I chose different fb prints for testing.(though it turned out I failed re-developing regardlessly whatever the developer I used)
3) This might be the last question and ultimately I wanted to try out through breaching : Tho different areas that distinctively has a different level of grain density(the situation such as test strip print in different exposing time) and thatmakes pretty obvious borderline, would it be possible to blur...or mix or make somehow look natural so in the end they look more natural or gradient fade. I know even if it is possible probably this would be the job of conservator level. But would be good to know if it is possible or not, even though it would require extreme carefulness or expert experiences.. For example I noticed the bleaching tend to apply more low density area than darker area, so actually this would make more contrasty looks between two different density areas.
To test bleaching and re-developing process I used the Moersch bleach stock and my own diluted ferricyanide stock.
paper : foma glossy / matt fiber base warm tone
tested with the one developed by dektol and lith printing
1.
I've observed those bleach chemical bleach my prints. Moersch concentrated stock seems pretty strong and with little dilution it bleached the print completely white. Ferrycianide(+water dilution) seem work slower and in the end it does bleach job as well. As I know the bleached part could be re-developed by developer again, so I rinsed bleached prints then tried to redeveloped it. But somehow it doesn't seem developing at all (or very little) and also I observed opposite case : high density area(very black) still remains some stains even though I tried with highly concentrated bleach stock.
I have no idea why I can't redevelop my bleached prints. It wasn't fixated yet, so my work procedure was : bleach > rinse > develop step, and even after a quite long time in the re-developer bath, the bleached area doesn't seem changed at all. What would be the causes?
1) too much bleach would change the grain structure so anyway it wouldn't allow to recover image by redeveloping?
2) probably there might be still some ferrycianide concentrates remains in the paper, so "much much" harder rinse required before redeveloping?
2.
I have additional questions regarding the situation..
1) after bleached the paper appears complete white base though it is branded as warm tone paper..Is it normal? Is there any special bleaching technique or material depending on paper type(warm/normal/glossy/matt)?
2) In case that I do bleach and redevelop my print, can I use different developer for re-developing? Is there anybody has a similar experience? Initially I wanted to try this out(re-develop) that's why I chose different fb prints for testing.(though it turned out I failed re-developing regardlessly whatever the developer I used)
3) This might be the last question and ultimately I wanted to try out through breaching : Tho different areas that distinctively has a different level of grain density(the situation such as test strip print in different exposing time) and thatmakes pretty obvious borderline, would it be possible to blur...or mix or make somehow look natural so in the end they look more natural or gradient fade. I know even if it is possible probably this would be the job of conservator level. But would be good to know if it is possible or not, even though it would require extreme carefulness or expert experiences.. For example I noticed the bleaching tend to apply more low density area than darker area, so actually this would make more contrasty looks between two different density areas.