If Carlos Gasparinho is still tuning in here . . he has a superb
recipe for kallitype.
Carlos did a considerable amount of research on this and came to the
conclusion
that the kallitype done well is virtually indistinguishable from the
Pl. Further, he
felt the formulae printed originally were perhaps not correct
deliberately so as to
lead practitioners away from it. I'm not putting this well . .
suffice it to say if you use
the historic recipes the results will be fine but not really good.
Jack Fulton
On August2006, at 4:46 PM, Sandy King wrote:
> For kallitype I have usee potassium oxalate at 20%, same percentage
> as I use sodium citrate.
>
> However, unlike with straight palladium, where you get warmer
> results than with sodium citrate, I do not find any advantage to
> potassium oxalate with kallitype. It works great, but since sodium
> citrate is generally less expensive and less toxic I prefer it.
>
> Sandy
>
>
>> Dear all,
>>
>> I would like to know the correct concentration at which potassium
>> oxalate is used to develop Kallitypes. Thanks for your help.
>>
>> Rajul
Received on 08/23/06-06:29:45 PM Z
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