Don't forget the choice of paper will make a big difference in the final 'look', as will the dilution and time toned. So if you compare, keep everything consistent to truly know the differences.
Evan, what do you mean by warmer?
Can you explain more specifically with a common paper that you've tried? I'd be interested to know.
Thanks,
- Thomas
Thanks Evan.
Ilford MGIV is pretty much the only paper I envision using in the future, so it's good to know that the Harman selenium toner works OK with it.
Kodak Rapid Selenium Toner works really well with this paper if bleached and sepia toned first. It really takes the selenium toner well after that treatment. The sepia gives the highs a golden hue and the midtones go warm, a bit brown. Then the selenium fills in from the bottom, and you can go from really subtle, depending on bleach dilution and time, to really intense coloration.
You guys might laugh, but I've never really done anything with Se before (beginning printer here, although experienced in film). However, just tonight I did just a few RC prints in KRST (1+10) and loved it. Selenium is like liquid crack for prints. Inside my head I was thinking... "You mean I can just throw my prints in this and agitate for 5 minutes and they're just plain better all around with minimal downsides?"
I was using Agfa MCP and it took on a very faint red/copperish tone. Not totally subtle, but nothing over the top. The blacks settled in very nicely and overall the print just looked more detailed and had more depth. Completely my kind of toned feel - it looks great. Afterward I tried some Ilford MGIV RC and the results were similar, but noticeably more subdued compared to the Agfa.
Of course hearing all of the toxic horror stories of the stuff I took precautions but I never really found it that dangerous to deal with, considering you don't need much in a tray and my agitation was a fairly simple rock back and forth in a controlled manner. It took atleast 5 minutes before I saw effects set in but A+Bing against the same prints I could tell they were different.
If I want to increase intensity of toning, it's just a matter of dilution, correct? It seemed like increased time made almost no difference past a certain point.
Past a certain point there is not going to be a change.
If you try some warmtone papers, like Ilford MGWT or Fomatone, you will see a much more pronounced effect.
Yes, please be careful not to breathe the fumes.
- Thomas
Keep the precautions -- lots of good ventilation and never, EVER let it touch your skin. One small cut, that stuff gets inside and you have some serious problems.
BTW: Seeing as how great selenium toning seems to be - is there any downside to it other than potential color shifts when they aren't desired?
Only other downside I can think of is slight increase in Dmax can sometimes turn detailed shadows into a black mass, though this is usually easily avoidable by decreasing contrast. Most often the increase in Dmax is welcome.
BTW: Seeing as how great selenium toning seems to be - is there any downside to it other than potential color shifts when they aren't desired?
Yes, definitely. I'm finding it also quite useful as it doesn't seem to affect the highlights - allowing me to print lighter and bring the blacks down in the toner. It seems if I increase contrast to approach something similar the highlights blow out while the blacks go down (the latter I want).
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