b/w Photography after processing, coloured in bluetoner
Mr. Mart.
[OPC] Online Photography Club
[Natur- und Makrofotografie]
http://groups.google.com/group/naturfotografie-und-makrofotografie
(Wir suchen ständig neue Mitglieder.)
http://swnatur.blogspot.com
Mail: mart.sc...@googlemail.com
Mail: mart.phot...@googlemail.com
Wowwwww itis so cool! I would to make it good like that.
If you are interested in blue toners there are two
types and I can post formulas if you like. The first type is
called Iron Blue toner and the other is Gold toner. Iron
Blue is relatively cheap to make but the image is not
permanent, Gold toner is very permanent, in fact a form of
Gold toner is used to protect microfilm and other important
images, but is relatively expensive. Iron-Blue will produce
vivid blue depending somewhat on the paper emulsion. Gold
toner tends to produce a more subtle blue and, in fact, on
cold or neutral tone emulsions, just intensifies them a bit.
On very warm tone papers it can produce a fairly bright
blue. Gold toner has the odd property of turning brick red
if the images are subsequently toned in a sulfide toner like
Kodak Brown Toner or Sepia toner. If images are partially
toned in a sulfiding toner the highlights will turn red and
the shadows blue.
--
Richard Knoppow
Los Angeles, CA, USA
dick...@ix.netcom.com
I just started to learn how to take photo...and I just
bought camera, Nikon P80. Maybe I should to buy another one.
What do you think?
> From: dick...@ix.netcom.com
> To: Black--White...@googlegroups.com
> Subject: Re: Darkroom images No. 1
> Date: Fri, 20 Feb 2009 08:55:47 -0800
Well, I am no expert on digital cameras. Why do you
think you need another camera?