jonmon6691
Member
Up until recently I've been using the Jacquard two-part chemistry on water color paper and had reasonable results, especially using digital negatives. But I wanted to start contact printing large format sheets and after reading Mike Ware's Cyanomicon, I was excited to also try out the New Cyanotype kit from Photographers Formulary, a double whammy for my print quality I thought! Ultra sharp, pixel-free prints directly from film, and long tonal ranges with very deep blues from the New chemistry.
But things haven't been so rosy. My first issue was during the "assembly" of the sensitizer from the kit, I got about 70mL yield after the cooling, precipitation, and filtering step instead of the roughly 30mL that the instructions say to expect. I'm not sure if I should worry about this but it seems to me like too much yield in this step means that all of the possible crystallization hasn't happened yet and hasn't been filtered out. I get pretty persistent areas of crystallization on my prints even when I take care to avoid pools by blotting or applying less sensitizer.
I'm still using water color and mixed media paper, and I know people often say that the New chemistry is super sensitive to buffering so I've got some Platinum Rag on order which I'll definitely try, but the splotchiness on my prints seems really haphazard, I would be surprised if the paper making process was so "Jackson Pollock" like with their application of buffering agents. And I don't have any issue with them darkening before exposure, they are a nice canary yellow until exposed.
Here's an example of 6 prints all with the exact same chemistry, same exposure time, same negative, same paper, same printing session, same application technique (glass rod)... I'm not sure what uncontrolled variables I'm not considering that could cause this wide variation in contrast/quality/clearing/etc.
But things haven't been so rosy. My first issue was during the "assembly" of the sensitizer from the kit, I got about 70mL yield after the cooling, precipitation, and filtering step instead of the roughly 30mL that the instructions say to expect. I'm not sure if I should worry about this but it seems to me like too much yield in this step means that all of the possible crystallization hasn't happened yet and hasn't been filtered out. I get pretty persistent areas of crystallization on my prints even when I take care to avoid pools by blotting or applying less sensitizer.
I'm still using water color and mixed media paper, and I know people often say that the New chemistry is super sensitive to buffering so I've got some Platinum Rag on order which I'll definitely try, but the splotchiness on my prints seems really haphazard, I would be surprised if the paper making process was so "Jackson Pollock" like with their application of buffering agents. And I don't have any issue with them darkening before exposure, they are a nice canary yellow until exposed.
Here's an example of 6 prints all with the exact same chemistry, same exposure time, same negative, same paper, same printing session, same application technique (glass rod)... I'm not sure what uncontrolled variables I'm not considering that could cause this wide variation in contrast/quality/clearing/etc.