Raghu Kuvempunagar
Member
I tried some old Stonehenge paper that I had laying around. Cheap and thin. I forgot how crappy this paper is for Alt. Anyways, I went ahead and acidified it in 10% Sulfamic Acid, washed and hung up to dry. Now the crappy part that I had forgotten about... it doesn't like brush application. To be more accurate, it doesn't like foam brush application. Small paper burrs on the surface. Once the paper dried, I was able to brush them off with my hand. I made the exposure, and developed in the Copper Sulphate...by brushing it on with a foam brush. More burrs. But... I got a wonderful print! Much better than what I could get on expensive, Revere. So... I acidified a sheet of the Revere, even though one would think that it's not buffered like these cheap papers, but what the heck. I'm waiting for the Cyanotype coating to dry, then I'll give it a go. For now, here is the print on cheap garbage Stonehenge... You can see the paper burrs on the full print. I included a closeup, too...
View attachment 395853 View attachment 395854
Thanks @NedL for sharing your experience and result.
The blue patches in the print, I'm curious if they appeared immediately after brushing the developer or during the wash.
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Cost, practicality, contamination, inefficiency, health issues, pure lack of any necessity whatsoever - to name just a few.Why not an airbrush with a broad tip
One thing I learned early on
Ha, I'm still thinking about the ammonium chloride. When I mixed it, I'd forgotten it is endothermic and even that surprised meAnyway, it changes the paper characteristics quite a bit.
I notice that my "blend" of copper and PB starts near the middle of the scale. It would be a good thing to know what factors affect the "switchover" point from copper to PB ( length/depth of exposure, pH, buffers, temperature, differences in AFC, etc etc.... ) Kind of a "split toning" control if you will....
Thanks Raghu,....
After printing for some time now I came to a protocol that works for me. I have not been able to get rid of a slight veil or fog in the development step, most likely this is paper related, and I can live with that. I find the colour scheme interesting, but not suiting every image.
Hi Cor,
Glad to know that the process modifications are giving you good results.
formation, bleeding.
Yesterday I went ahead with the testing of Schut Simili paper. I used Ammonium Chloride in the sensitiser. Interestingly, the sensitised paper turned darker (unlike Salland) as it dried hinting at the presence of additives in the paper. Despite this I went ahead with the exposure and developed with the Copper-Citrate complex described in OP. I was pleasantly surprised to see no streaks and no
rogue pigment formation. The print was relatively more saturated in tones but there was no blue bleeding or thick Copper veil anywhere. Overall a decent print. Next time I will consider giving the paper a pre-wash in dilute Sulfamic Acid to at least neutralise the buffer.
I'- Raghu
I also see the best saturation and D max on Simili, probably I use liberal amounts of sensitizer.
dilute Sulfamic Acid
How dilute?
I've tried acidifying Salland and Simili. The paper came out identical to how it went in. I used citric acid; I'm not sure if I've tried sulfamic at some point as well.
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