In this case I believe the stains are ink from a printer.
If it is dye based ink, it should wash off with water
Curious, how did they get there in the first place?
Till a certain extend ink stains can be removed wit household chlorine (Cl) ("bleekwater" in Flemish)
Careful!!! My experience with chlorine bleach and photographic emulsions is that the bleach will strip the emulsion right off the paper base! I would NOT try chlorine bleach to do this without testing thoroughly. You'd likely have to use a very, very weak dilution.Till a certain extend ink stains can be removed wit household chlorine (Cl) ("bleekwater" in Flemish), as used to thoroughly clean the kitchen or bathroom.
And if the print you are talking about is a genuine FB photographic wet print, then you can wash the chlorine out with plain water, or els there wil be a yellow stain left which wil get somewhat darker over tine.
That's how I managed to remove the stain of the famous blue ink, as used for stamping my name on the back, from the emulsion side, but there was still a kind of faint bluish 'shadow' left, but I could live with it as it was a print from a hard to print negative...
Careful!!! My experience with chlorine bleach and photographic emulsions is that the bleach will strip the emulsion right off the paper base! I would NOT try chlorine bleach to do this without testing thoroughly. You'd likely have to use a very, very weak dilution.
Doremus
That's why I used household chlorine
Household bleach (which is not chlorine; it's a hypochlorite solution) is much too strong to use in pure form on a gelatin emulsion. Try diluting it 1+100 or so, apply sparingly and wash thoroughly afterwards. The gelatin emulsion may still discolor and it will soften during treatment.
What is commonly called "chlorine bleach" in the U.S. is a sodium hypochlorite solution, often with sodium hydroxide and other ingredients (surfactants, fragrances, etc.). "Clorox" is the most recognizable name brand.Household bleach (which is not chlorine; it's a hypochlorite solution) is much too strong to use in pure form on a gelatin emulsion. Try diluting it 1+100 or so, apply sparingly and wash thoroughly afterwards. The gelatin emulsion may still discolor and it will soften during treatment.
I got it from Wikipedia
Yes. Which translates to pretty much what @Doremus Scudder and I said above.
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