- Joined
- Jan 29, 2012
- Messages
- 7
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I recently cleaned out the closets and garden shed of an older collector who is moving due to health issues, part of my haul was a box of old chemicals in brown glass bottles with cork stoppers (oldest) or bakelite lids. Some of these bottles have lost their labels or they are illegible. I am a little concerned about safety, not in properly handling the chems in their normal state but if any of the commonly used chemicals in the 30s-40s might become unstable with age and reactive.
The bottles I could readily identify were things like silver nitrate (200-250g) and ammonium bichromate (not di-). There are also 3 bottles of metal nuggets, which from weight I assume 2 are silver, and the 3rd is probably copper sulfate from the color (well, something or other copper-related). I will make a list of everything I can identify and take some pics of the rest and post it for comments, I just want some reassurance before I actually open any of the bottles that don't have labels. Yes I have gloves, goggles, apron and an industrial respirator, but no real lab equipment. I have taken basic chemistry at uni level in the not too distant past, I know what can happen if I mix the wrong chems with water or expose a long-sealed reactive chemical to air. I do plan on doing collodion and pt/pd at some point in my life, though for the moment I do 8x10 B&W and E6 and scan only. I post on LFPF usually, but this question is probably best posted here.
Interested to hear any comments.
The bottles I could readily identify were things like silver nitrate (200-250g) and ammonium bichromate (not di-). There are also 3 bottles of metal nuggets, which from weight I assume 2 are silver, and the 3rd is probably copper sulfate from the color (well, something or other copper-related). I will make a list of everything I can identify and take some pics of the rest and post it for comments, I just want some reassurance before I actually open any of the bottles that don't have labels. Yes I have gloves, goggles, apron and an industrial respirator, but no real lab equipment. I have taken basic chemistry at uni level in the not too distant past, I know what can happen if I mix the wrong chems with water or expose a long-sealed reactive chemical to air. I do plan on doing collodion and pt/pd at some point in my life, though for the moment I do 8x10 B&W and E6 and scan only. I post on LFPF usually, but this question is probably best posted here.
Interested to hear any comments.

