Thank you very much Doremus for the answer. I am new to bleaching and toning so if I put to many questions, sorry. What s happening if you use a ferricyanide/bromide rehalogenating bleach before using Selenium? If was just selenium I have to refix after too? I have to refix only if the bleach was not follow by the selenium or has to be refix after both of them too?
Hope are not too many questions, thank you !
The problem with fixing after using a rehalogenating bleach is that the fixer + subsequent wash removes the image that the bleach rehalogenated.
While that may be your intention (bleaching to remove a portion of the image = brightening the highlights), the usual reason one uses a rehalogenating bleach is to permit re-developing that portion of the image in an image tone modifying re-developer - like sepia toner.
Andrei and Matt, I really need to clear up the confusion I may have caused: I'm talking about bleaching a print to improve highlights, lighten certain areas, etc. I'm not referring to the bleaching that one does when sepia toning or split toning sepia/selenium. If you're doing a two-step sepia toning that requires a rehalogenating bleach, then you definitely don't want to refix before toning (you'd destroy the image).
My workflow involves only toning in selenium, which needs to be done after a print is fully fixed. I bleach only to lighten areas of the print or, on occasion, I bleach back an entire print. I use a rehalogenating bleach to do this with, but I'm not toning the bleached image; I want it gone, so I refix. When one is using Farmer's reducer for similar purposes, on should refix as well. After the print is well-fixed, it can be transferred to the selenium toner. Any bleaching converts the silver into other compounds that need to be fixed out if you don't want them there, hence refixing after bleaching for this reason.
If you're sepia toning, then your finished print gets bleached and then redeveloped in the toning solution, without fixing in between, just a rinse to stop the bleach. The toner converts the rehalogenated silver back into silver sulfide, a stable compound, so the print needs no additional fixing thereafter, just a wash and dry.
Sorry for any confusion,
Doremus