• Mix and prepare salt solution and silver nitrate solution in two separate bottles • Apply salt solution to paper and dry • Apply silver nitrate solution to paper and dry • Place negative (or object for photogram) over sensitised paper and expose to UV light • Wash in water (10-20 minutes) • Wash in salt water (30 seconds-1 minute) • Second wash in water (approx 10 mins) • Tone (usually in gold chloride solution) • Wash in water (10 minutes) • Fix in sodium thiosulfate bath 1 (4 minutes) • Fix in sodium thisosulfate bath 2 (4 minutes) • Wash in water (4 minutes) • Remove fixer with hypoclear of sodium sulphite (4 minutes) • Wash in clean water for 30 minutes - 1 hour. The salt print process is often confused with Talbot's slightly later 1841
calotype or "talbotype" process, in part because salt printing was mostly used for making prints from calotype paper negatives rather than live subjects. Calotype paper employed
silver iodide instead of silver chloride. Calotype was a
developing out process, not a
printing out process like the salt print. The most important functional difference is that it allowed a much shorter exposure to produce an invisible
latent image which was then
chemically developed to visibility. This made calotype paper far more practical for use in a
camera. Salted paper typically required at least an hour of exposure in the camera to yield a negative showing much more than objects
silhouetted against the sky. Gold toning of the salted paper print was a popular technique to make it much more permanent. == Contemporary uses of the salt print ==