It is commonly said that selenium toner affects the shadow first where as brown and sepia toners affect the highlight first.
I can understand the latter. Highlight area has less silver so less time is required to finish the toning process to completion. But I have trouble understanding the first.
Saying "shadow area" is the same thing as silver rich area. That would mean any attempt to tone it will take longer, I think. Then, why would selenium toner tones this silver rich area first while leaving highlight area largely untouched? If I did this, wouldn't selenium toner tone lightly silvered, highlight area to completion rather quickly?
If I are to split tone, my (corrected) understanding is to selenium tone first, then sepia/brown. How does the selenium toner *knows* to leave the highlight part alone? Wouldn't that part tone to completion first?
Please help this highly confused darkroom guy....
I can understand the latter. Highlight area has less silver so less time is required to finish the toning process to completion. But I have trouble understanding the first.
Saying "shadow area" is the same thing as silver rich area. That would mean any attempt to tone it will take longer, I think. Then, why would selenium toner tones this silver rich area first while leaving highlight area largely untouched? If I did this, wouldn't selenium toner tone lightly silvered, highlight area to completion rather quickly?
If I are to split tone, my (corrected) understanding is to selenium tone first, then sepia/brown. How does the selenium toner *knows* to leave the highlight part alone? Wouldn't that part tone to completion first?
Please help this highly confused darkroom guy....

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