Enjoy - you should be able to get back into photography without spending a red cent, er, farthing.
Seven years in a freezer? It will be fine. Have at it!
Interesting (in my experience, anyway) that Ilford Multigrade RC IV seems to age better than its predecessor.
Multigrade RC III has been refrigerated since the 1990s, but prints so-so.
My experience is all MG3 paper is fogged. MG2 lasted better. I've bought lots of old paper (older than 20-30 years) quite a few times and the MG3 is always unusable. Most Kodak Polycontrast has turned to mud. Agfa rc paper, unless it was frozen, probably has noticeable fog.
Old high grade fb papers are almost always good. Old lower grade fb papers generally are not.
Paper stored at room temperature for 7 years will be the same as it was when you put it in the room.
There was also a paper called Polymer as I recall. which apparently lasted into the 1980s
That might have something to do with the fact that III was only around for 4 years - 1990 - 1994 while IV was around for 25 years - 1994 - 2019.
You are probably referring to PolyMax - the Kodak variable contrast paper that was produced by them until they cancelled black and white paper manufacture.
It replaced Polycontrast, and was quite good.
I have a set of PolyMax filters which are more extensive than the earlier Polycontrast filters, and work reasonably well with Ilford Multigrade IV as well.
I have a big supply of Phenidone but I've not used a lot of it in recent years. I've looked for a good formula to use it for processing prints, but haven't found anything. Can someone out there suggest one?
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