
An example of the same image but with two separate treatments. The first print is a straight forward wet-process hand printed image. The second is the same image but this one has been sepia toned. Basically immersed in a two bath sepia toner which changes the appearance of the print and increases the tonal range, at the same time giving the photographic print a archival permanence.Ingleton, North Yorkshire, England.
From no specific project as such, 1992.
Copyright of all images and work displayed upon this blog spot are the exclusive property of Trevor David Betts. All rights reserved.

These seem so ethereal, particularly the sepia one. It's interesting to see them side by side, to see the difference the tone makes. Do you have a preference for sepia/non-sepia tones or does it depend on the image?
ReplyDeleteThe reason why I posted these two images together was so that you could see the difference in the tonal quality and well the difference that there is between the two images, when one is a straight forward untoned monochrome print and the other a sepia one. As for do I have a preference, the answer to that would be no (it does depend on the image). Some prints work better by being sepia toned whilst others do not, and it depends on the print. In actually fact the darker the image is printed the better it usually tones.
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