The original Talbotype process, in which the latent image is formed upon Iodide of Silver, produces, next to Collodion, the most stable image; but the difficulty of obtaining bright and warm tints on Iodide of Silver, will stand in the way of its adoption.
The toning of Paper Positives is the part of the process which is likely to injure their stability; inasmuch as the finest results cannot easily be obtained without incurring sulphuration, and the action of Sulphur, if carried to any extent, has been shown to be detrimental. The point to be kept in view, is to alter the original structure of the image as little as possible in toning; and it is best to use Gold in preference to Sulphur as the colouring agent. On theoretical grounds, toning by an alkaline solution of Chloride of Gold ([p. 132]), and fixing by Ammonia, is the best process; but the employment of Sel d'or, which gives a more agreeable colour and has not been found practically to injure the image, will be generally preferred. In using a single fixing and toning Bath the same object of working by Gold rather than by Sulphur may be best attained by maintaining the activity of the Bath by constant additions of Chloride of Gold.
The prints which are least stable are such as have been toned in acid Hyposulphite Baths, without Gold; and the difficulty of preserving such pictures from becoming yellow in the half-tones is very great. Possibly a portion of the Sulphuretted Acid may unite with the Suboxide of Silver and cannot be removed by washing (see [p. 158]); but even if this be not the case, it is certain that no ordinary amount of care will obviate the occasional occurrence of fading, unless the Hyposulphite Bath be kept neutral to test-paper. And all those plans of toning in which Acetic or Hydrochloric Acid is mixed with Hyposulphite of Soda, and the Positive immersed whilst the liquid is in a milky state from precipitation of Sulphur, ought studiously to be avoided.
It will be well also to avoid pushing the action of the fixing and toning Bath to its utmost limits, since practice and theory both teach us that the Positives which have been long in the Hyposulphite, and consequently show a tendency to yellowness in the light parts, are most liable to lose their half-tones on keeping. Photographic Prints are found often to darken slightly in the course of years; and therefore by suspending the toning action at an earlier stage a margin is left for what some have termed "an improvement by time."
The use of Albuminized in preference to plain paper gives an advantage in protecting the image from oxidation; but if constantly exposed to moisture, a putrefactive decomposition of the animal matter may occur. The proper colour of the Albumen image being a pale red, the black tones should not be sought for on that variety of paper: their production, if Hyposulphite of Soda were used in toning, would probably imply an amount of Sulphuration which would more than counterbalance any advantage otherwise derivable from the Albumen.
Permanent Positives of a black colour may easily be obtained by sensitizing plain paper, free from animal matters, with Oxide of Silver in place of Nitrate. The simply fixed image being in that case of a sepia tint, requires a less amount of toning to change it to black. An impression was at one time prevalent that Ammonio-Nitrate prints were unstable; but so far from such being the case, they are proved to withstand the action of all destructive tests better than pictures prepared upon the same kind of paper sensitized with plain Nitrate of Silver.
Mode of testing the permanence of Positives.—The tests for Hyposulphite of Soda are not sufficiently delicate to indicate with certainty when the process of washing has been properly performed. The quantity of that salt left in the paper is usually so small and so much mixed up with organic matter, that the application of Protonitrate of Mercury or of Nitrate of Silver to the liquid which drains from the corner of the print, would probably mislead the operator.
A dilute solution of Permanganate of Potash, prepared by dissolving from half a grain or two grains of the salt, according to its purity, in one gallon of distilled water, affords a convenient mode of testing Positives as regards their power of resisting oxidation; and to an experienced eye it will prove the presence or absence of Hyposulphite of Soda, the smallest trace of which is sufficient to remove the pink colour of the Permanganate.
The most available and simple plan of testing permanence is to enclose the pictures in a stoppered glass bottle with a small quantity of water. If they retain their half-tones after a course of three months of this treatment, and do not become mouldy, the mode of printing followed is satisfactory.
Boiling water will also be found useful in distinguishing the unstable colours produced by Sulphur from those following the judicious employment of Gold; in all cases the image will at first be reddened by the hot water, but if toned without Sulphur it will, as a rule, recover much of its dark colour on drying.