Re: stop-fixer


Campos & Davis Photos (photos@campos-davis.co.uk)
Thu, 01 Jul 1999 15:18:25 +0100


I would like to read your reply, but on this list we never send anything as
an attachment. Please could you re post it as text in the email. This is
because of viruses.

Campos & Davis Photos
6 Cranbourne Road
London N10 2BT
Tel/Fax + 44 181 883 8638
email: photos@campos-davis.co.uk
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From: EddyWillems <eddy.willems@worldonline.be>
To: alt-photo-process-l@skyway.usask.ca
Subject: Re: stop-fixer
Date: Wednesday, 30 June, 1999 9:56 PM

See Camera Arts november/december 1981
Brushes with Light, picturres by Denny Moers
p 88 - 95
you can fix the print afterwards, hypo etc.

-----Oorspronkelijk bericht-----
Van: dean kansky <dkansky@hotmail.com>
Aan: alt-photo-process-l@skyway.usask.ca
<alt-photo-process-l@skyway.usask.ca>
Datum: woensdag 30 juni 1999 21:43
Onderwerp: stop-fixer

>The other day I was making photograms ( silver). My stop bath and fixer
were
>shot, yet I had a few sheets of paper left. So I exposed the last few and
>painted on the developer. In so doing, I left potions of the paper
>undeveloped (untouched by developer). I then placed the print in stop bath
>and fixer (both of which, as I said, were shot). After doing so, however,
I
>noticed that the undeveloped portion of the print had turned a wonderful
>DARK yellow.
>
>Was it the exhausted stop or fixer that turned the print yellow?
>
>Since I liked the prints, I re-freshed the fixer and re-fixed them. Will
>this save the print from the fate of prints that are ill fixed?
>
>If not, I would like to dye the print the dark yellow color I got (with
the
>"stain" from the stop/fixer). Can anybody recommend some process that
might
>let me archive this color?
>
>
>Thanks,
> Dean
>
>
>_______________________________________________________________
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