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Lith Printing


brian_jefferis

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I was leafing through Gene Nocon's "Photographic Printing" one day and came across a section on lith printing. The images produced in this process are beautiful. I noticed that all the major mail-order companies only carry Sterling Lith DW and Kodak is the only maker it seems of lith developer. My question is twofold then: First, does anyone out there have experience with lith printing and could they tell me a little about it? Second, is Sterling the only maker of lith paper?
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There are two excellent sources for information on lith printing, both

by the same person. The book "The Photographer's Master Printing

Course" by Tim Rudman has an excellent discussion of lith printing.

Also, Tim Rudman wrote two articles in two recent issues of "Photo

Techniques" magazine that go into even more detail than the book. I've

done some lith printing. As far as I know, the Sterling paper is the

only lith paper that is readily available in the United States and I

think Kodak Kodalith developer is the only readily available

developer. The book and articles mention other papers and developers,

as I recall, and perhaps one of the major mail order places like B&H

could order them for you. I like the process but it is extremely time

consuming. My developing times routinely ran fifteen to twenty minutes

per print, most of it spent in the dark to avoid safelight fog with

those kind of times. The other problem is that the developer exhausts

rapidly and gets noticeably weaker from print to print. Therefore it

is very difficult to predict a correct developing time from one print

to the next.

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  • 2 weeks later...

I have not done any of this type printing before, but I the think

Brian short coming of lith printing coulde be solved a drum processor.

I have a Jobo CPP-2 that I know would do the trick.

 

<p>

 

First, once you exposed the paper you can place in the light tight

drum and all remaining processing can then be done in daylight.

Second, Jobo drums use very low volumes of chemicals and are intended

as a one shot use to be discarded. Thus, each time you develop you

are using fresh chemistry instead of used partially depleted recycled

chemistry. This would allow you to enjoy repeatable developments

times each time you process a print because you will have the same

strength of chemistry from batch to batch.

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