BTW, to all: How do you determine your standard printing time with gum?
Loris,
If you go to:
http://www.czaphotography.com/show.php?what=learning&which=1
on my website and scroll down a tad, you will see images related to this 
question.
David is totally right in that gum is not like the others in choosing SPT, 
because if you think about it, when exposing, let's say, pt/pd, you look for 
max black in Step 1, but the paper absorbs the chemistry, it doesn't get 
thicker like gum does.  So what I did was quite arbitrary, and was to choose 
a time that allowed complete development in 1 hour just letting the print 
sit there, but also produced a nice punchy colored layer.  The layer is 
stable, does not whoosh off, and allows spray development if I want to 
shorten the development time to 1/2 hour (spraying after a 5 or 10 minute 
soak).  Once I chose this arbitrary time (UVBL 6mn, under 15 watt bulbs) 
then I printed my 101 step palette and derived my curve from this.
But as they all say, YRMV, as this time with an offlist person did not work.
The other thing, tho--if you vary 6 minutes by a minute, that is only a 
quarter of a stop exposure different in photographic terms, so it is not 
like you have to be worried about seconds!
Chris 
Received on 07/12/06-08:35:55 AM Z
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