JG Motamedi said:
Sometime back I tried to develop a plate in a FeSO4 based wet-plate developer, it did produce and image but had a terrible fog. I never tried again because no matter how much I polished I could never get rid of the fog, so it ruined the plate. I am sure however that it should be possible to do with enough time and money.
I don't know anything about silvering glass, but will look into it.
I'd guess the fog was due, in part, to the fact that a plate developed in a liquid developer might be several stops faster than one done with mercury vapor (though I don't *know* that it would be). OTOH, most developers can't develop exposed iodide (I'm told), so you might need to experiment with changes in your fuming process to favor a bromide or even chloro-bromide sensitive layer.
Given the potential for lower cost experimentation with silvered glass, one could try stuff like this and have a bit less of "Polaroid syndrome" -- where you don't reshoot a bad image, because of the cost of the film, but instead just give it up as lost.
Oh, htmlguru? If you have a mirror that isn't tarnished, it probably won't work (and if it is tarnished, you're likely to destroy the coating trying to clean it -- no win, I'm afraid). All "front silvered" mirrors made commercially in the past 40-50 years at least are vacuum aluminized or dielectric coated -- better reflectivity than silver once the coating is a few weeks old, and far more durable. Common mirrors kept silver almagam backings for a few more years, where the paint over the silver could protect the metal and the cost of the silver didn't yet offset the cost of vacuum deposition.
Amateur astronomers kept silvering alive, though, because it could be done at home by a hobbyist instead of sending his nice new mirror in the mail to a company that might well take months to get around to coating it and sending it back. With silvering, if you ordered the chemicals when you got the mirror blank and grits, you could potentially grind, polish, figure, silver, and install a mirror in a couple weeks. And you could easily strip and resilver when the coating started to yellow too much.