Pete H
Member
I was tempted by Tim Rudman's "Master Photographer's Toning Book" (a masterpiece of clarity) to try silver-bronze mirror toning using Rockland Halo-Chrome.
Rule 1: Make sure your darkroom is well ventilated!
The ammonia *really* gets up your nose.
Rules 2 and 3: see rule 1.
Rule 4: practice the technique for getting a smooth flow of toner over the print - it's very easy to get slosh marks on the print.
Rules 5 - 10: repeat rule 1 !!!
Question: the instruction leaflet says "Obtain a bottle of houshold ammonia at the cleaning supplies section of a grocery store. Dilute one part of ammonia with 2 parts of water." What is the desired final concentration of the ammonia? I eventually found a bottle of cleaning fluid labelled 5 - 15% ammonia. I have no idea how much (if at all) to dilute it. Does anybody know? Is the concentration important (apart from the nasal damage!) ?
Anyway, using direct toning with a very early snatch from the toner gives a faint warm silver-pink sheen to the highlights. I doubt whether it would scan, but I don't have a flat-bed scanner anyway. The results look pretty good and worth some more experiments.
Rule 1: Make sure your darkroom is well ventilated!
The ammonia *really* gets up your nose.

Rules 2 and 3: see rule 1.
Rule 4: practice the technique for getting a smooth flow of toner over the print - it's very easy to get slosh marks on the print.
Rules 5 - 10: repeat rule 1 !!!
Question: the instruction leaflet says "Obtain a bottle of houshold ammonia at the cleaning supplies section of a grocery store. Dilute one part of ammonia with 2 parts of water." What is the desired final concentration of the ammonia? I eventually found a bottle of cleaning fluid labelled 5 - 15% ammonia. I have no idea how much (if at all) to dilute it. Does anybody know? Is the concentration important (apart from the nasal damage!) ?
Anyway, using direct toning with a very early snatch from the toner gives a faint warm silver-pink sheen to the highlights. I doubt whether it would scan, but I don't have a flat-bed scanner anyway. The results look pretty good and worth some more experiments.

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