Lith Printing Technique - Lesson 4: Warmtone Paper: Agfa MCC
Lith Printing Technique - Lesson 4: Warmtone Paper: Agfa MCC
Lith Printing Technique - Lesson 4: Warmtone Paper: Agfa MCC
As for most lith enthusiasts in the early days of lith printing, I made my
first lith prints on the unrivalled Sterling Lith paper using Fotospeed Lith
developer. In my quest for a cheaper alternative, I came across Agfa MCC,
which had just been introduced to the market, and started experimenting
with my own developer recipes. Apparently, the emulsion of Agfa MCC has
been altered several times over the years. For a long time it did not lith at
all, due to accelerators for the development incorporated in the emulsion.
For the last two or three years lith has been possible again.
Since it was clear that one criterion for lithablity was the absence of
incorporated development accelerators, a number of excellent papers was
available for us to choose from. All those papers had another advantage:
a higher content of silver due to the technology applied.
Papers of Orwo, Foma and Forte, as well as the Kentmere papers from
England and Kodak Ektalure formed an alternative to Sterling and
Oriental. Some new brands and papers appeared, some others
unfortunately disappeared for good.
Agfa MCC
Selenium and Viradon toner both increase the colour intensity of the mid
tones. Carbon toner has a neutralising effect.
Jos Mariën
Agfa MCC
Select Shedlight only differs slightly from its VC alternative. Due to the
higher content of silver the shadows appear a bit deeper. Selenium and
gold toning both induce a clear increase of the densities. Selenium works
predominantly in the shadows and gold across all densities.
Wolfgang Moersch
Select Shedlight
A “soft” lith print with high density in the highlights - to avoid a loss of
separation in the shadows, development was stopped just when the lith
reaction commenced. Toning in selenium 1+4 for just 15 seconds affected
only the shadows, setting the tone apart from the rest of the image.
A.S.C.
Select Shedlight
Lith print with clean image whites, achieved by a short exposure. Toned in
selenium 1+20 for 3 minutes.
A.S.C.
Select Ivory
Kentmere’s Art Classic paper is also a bit less red than in former times.
However, it only takes a little selenium to shift the tone to warm red or -
with longer times of toning- to cooler magenta hues. Other ways to
achieve a bright red tone are either additive F or the polychrome
technique, where an ammonia alkaline developer is used as second
developer. (See PDF Creative toning techniques: color for black-and-
white)
Rolf H. Funke
Kentmere Art Classic toned in selenium
Fomatone
We had some examples of Fomatone before. Here one for a reddish hue
without toning. This image tone can be achieved with developing times of
less than 10 minutes by overexposing a lot and using a high dosage of
additive D, as retarder.
Wolfgang Moersch
Fomatone
In terms of lithability these papers differ little from one another. The
colour of the highlights is similar – mostly red-yellow – with green-black
or brown-black shadows. The edge between lith black and the mid tones is
not very sharp. The transitions between highlights and shadows often
appear greenish, especially in highly diluted developer solutions. To create
deep blacks, it is absolutely necessary to tone the print in a strong
solution of selenium toner for a short time.
A.S.C.
Forte Polywarmtone
Frank Peinemann
Bergger Prestige
Gerd Münz
Classic Polywarmtone