- Joined
- May 9, 2011
- Messages
- 203
- Format
- 35mm
I am posting this question out of curiosity. I was reading on sepia toning, and use of a ferricyanide bleach to convert silver to silver halide. this as you all know is also done in other processes such as c41, e6 and RA4; (a few atoms of silver form when exposed making the halide crystal developable). Now what if you expose, then decide you want to re-use the film/paper/emulsion without developing it, so you bleach it with ferricyanide or other bleach, (converting the few silver atoms back to silver halide), wash it with distilled water and let it dry (all in the dark or under appropriate safe lighting if the film is ortho)
If this works how i think it does, then surely you can "re use" any silver halide product if you say shoot it, then find you want to shoot something better.... I would love to try it but lack any bleach (anything other than ferricyanide?) as i dont have my RA-4 chemicals yet and am out of C-41)... would be an intresting thing to try....
If this works how i think it does, then surely you can "re use" any silver halide product if you say shoot it, then find you want to shoot something better.... I would love to try it but lack any bleach (anything other than ferricyanide?) as i dont have my RA-4 chemicals yet and am out of C-41)... would be an intresting thing to try....



