darkroommike
Subscriber
The other thing here, if you care enough about your images to take extra steps to preserve them, those extras, not even considering the archival or non archival properties of the toner, will prolong print life.
You can check Tim Rodman's toning book or various internet sources but, your assumption is correct, light sulphide toning does wonders for longevity; light selenium toning does not; on the other hand, full selenium toning works well. I can send you a free pdf on archival processing you email me at rwlambrec@gmail.com.So in my reading about selenium toning, I'm seeing things about how so-called "light" toning, traditionally done to improve image permanence, is not worth doing. But I'm unable to actually find any data or primary sources...
Yes, that would work. even brief sulphide toning does wonders!How long of sulphide toning is sufficient? Put some Fomatone for 20-30secs as it goes off too yellow otherwise. Would that work?
Lars
Black and white printing existed before toners. Those prints still exist largely unchanged. The biggest change is in the paper.
PE
For worse?
I see, thanks PE.My reply can be misunderstood. In old prints of about 100 years or so, the biggest change is the paper, not the image. Newer papers are, in fact, better from that standpoint.
PE
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