From: Carl Weese (cweese@earthlink.net)
Date: 11/14/01-07:45:37 AM Z
Shannon,
One possible answer is to print and tone separately. That is, expose several
negatives to get the degree of printout you want, then put them away in
light tight bags. After several print sessions, mix up your toner and do a
marathon toning session.---Carl
-- web site with picture galleries and workshop information at:http://home.earthlink.net/~cweese/
---------- >From: shannon stoney <sstoney@pdq.net> >To: alt-photo-process-l@sask.usask.ca >Subject: toning cyanotypes; fixing Van Dyke prints; POP toner >Date: Tue, Nov 13, 2001, 8:57 PM >
> I really liked my POP prints but decided that it was too expensive to > use the gold toner all the time. One problem was, it seems that when > you start a new printing session you have to mix up a new batch of > toner, rather than continuing to replenish the old batch, as you do > during a printing session. I wonder why this is.
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