Friday, July 30, 2021

"The Stone House" ~ Palladium toned Kallitype

 The last post I made was when I had finished a gum print, and had begun preparing the paper for another, which was finished with final touches, today. Three weeks to create that print, which will be posted tomorrow. While it was knowingly finished, I took the liberty to make a palladium print of the Stone House at the Grand Canyon, Arizona, during a visit there in June. A regular focus of photographers who come there, even a watercolor painting my wife painted some years ago.

This print continues the 11"x17" format printings, using digital images I captured on my Canon 20D over the years. Still around and working as designed, although, now, a great-grandpa of cameras. Like me. I have spent so many years editing the image as I capture it, exactly what I want, corner to corner, there is no nice way of making an 11x14 out of it, or other standard size, without losing the image intended. I have attempted to correct for this, using a quick re-edit pull-back of about 10% wider, to accommodate for the area lost when cropping back to an 11x14 format. Don't like that though. Just not normal.

This print was shot in RGB color, of course, with a pre-negative printing adjustments to include one of the few 'apps' that comes with Print Shop Pro; The Time Machine; the black & white negative, leaving a long scale tonal range, just like in a black & white negative. Not doing so, leaves intact the RGB information, and colors on the negative. That has an affect on printing. Green inhibits printing in the upper tonal range, and can be laid over a negative image, in a layer over the image, and that is the same as adding a density curve to the negative. Works quite well. Assign a -40 value in the hue bar, shifting it green, and that negative can be printing in sunlight.

As I have been doing more recently, I am making "poor man's palladium prints". That is, toning a silver image in a palladium toner. The more noble metal [palladium] completely replaces all the silver salts in the image, leaving only metallic palladium, instead of metallic silver to look at. A process with long historical roots, dating back to the turn of the 20th century. It's an honorable way to make palladium, or platinum prints, without the cost of printing in platinum, or palladium today. To keep it honorable, I always disclose on the Certificate of Authenticity of it's providence being a palladium toned Kallitype. The prices of each have sky rocketed in the past couple years.  I made this print on the Revere Platinum paper I have been using for years now. Really like that paper. For me, it is equal to Arches Platine paper. Perhaps that's just me.

Palladium toned Kallitype

"The Stone House" ~ 11"x17"

Grand Canyon, Arizona


 


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