- Joined
- Jan 5, 2004
- Messages
- 7
Hello! I have a question for the chemists in the crowd about sepia toner. Once in a solution, would there be any effective difference between sodium sulfide, anhydrous (1313-82-2) and disodium sulfide, nonahydrate, (1313-84-4)?
I have been out of printing for a while, and getting back into it, I see I am out of the Kodak Professional Sepia Toner I love, and they have stopped making it. I know some of you will tell me to just use thiocarbamide, but that is not useful advice for me. I find the two are very different, and I am hoping to reproduce the Kodak product as closely as possible.
The safety sheet on the Kodak product describes it as nonahydrate, (1313-84-4). Photographers Formulary only sells the anhydrous product (1313-82-2). The kind woman there who quickly replied to my email said she did not know about differences between the two chemicals. Tim Rudman's book includes a formula that also uses the anhydrous, so I am fairly certain it will work just fine. My question is whether it will be exactly the same.
Thanks in advance!
-Ed.
I have been out of printing for a while, and getting back into it, I see I am out of the Kodak Professional Sepia Toner I love, and they have stopped making it. I know some of you will tell me to just use thiocarbamide, but that is not useful advice for me. I find the two are very different, and I am hoping to reproduce the Kodak product as closely as possible.
The safety sheet on the Kodak product describes it as nonahydrate, (1313-84-4). Photographers Formulary only sells the anhydrous product (1313-82-2). The kind woman there who quickly replied to my email said she did not know about differences between the two chemicals. Tim Rudman's book includes a formula that also uses the anhydrous, so I am fairly certain it will work just fine. My question is whether it will be exactly the same.
Thanks in advance!
-Ed.
