DREW WILEY
Member
- Joined
- Jul 14, 2011
- Messages
- 13,709
- Format
- 8x10 Format
Bob, although only of a few of my larger Ciba prints are still on hand, having sold most of them, I have maybe 200 smaller ones, going right back to the introduction of the process in this country, which still look perfect after several decades. I've got one early set that sat in indirect mountain sunlight over 25 years before I removed it, and it still look vibrant. I don't know exactly how you mounted or lit them, but every single time I've heard that kind of story, something was amiss in the display method, either involving the kind of adhesive or the UV output of the lighting. I once did an experiment with full disclosure to the client in advance. I figured out how to mount Ciba glass smooth with the same kind of adhesive in a spray booth (for safety) that pros used to flawlessly mount reflective wallpaper onto totally smooth walls (itself a difficult craft). I framed a 20x24 for them, and they put in in their home under standard tungsten indoor lights, and it has remained good for over 20 yrs now. Then I took the other sample and put it in direct sunlight in my own window, and it faded totally out in less than two weeks. It was the combination of UV and that totally wrong kind of chemical adhesive that produced the disparity, and proved a hunch to myself. I've run all kinds of my own torture tests on them to learn the truth. By contrast, every one of my RA4 prints of similar vintage has yellowed to some extent. I probably won't live long enough to correctly evaluate the latest generation of Crystal Archive materials, but Fuji distinctly hints that the polyester Fujiflex version of it is likely to be the most permanent, presumably because residual color couplers rinse out better than on RC paper base. And I don't know where you encountered guarantees of 200 year permanence on anything. I've spoken to the patent holders of Cibachrome in person, when it was under Ciba-Geigy auspices, and they never made any such claim. Sounds more like a ploy by a marketing person somewhere in the system. Very few colorants truly withstand UV or oxidation for a long time. If you want the same clean true blue pigment that Michelangelo used on the Sistine Chapel ceiling, that now still looks stunning after the ceiling has been cleaned, and the same vibrant green (devoid of the off-color of synthetic phtahlo colorants), no problem - just rob all of Germany like Pope Leo did, re-mortgage the Vatican, and pay more per ounce than gold for ground select lapis lazuli and choice malachite. And if you have an even better budget than that, you could get a real nice process cyan by grinding up enough select turquoise pieces. I'll tip off the mine owner in central Nevada that you need a large quantity, so he has something to keep him active the next few hundred years. But please don't waste your time looting Bigfoot's grave to acquire such jewels; his wife has them, and even wears them to the annual Bigfoot formal dance party; so mug her.
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