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Fogged paper...

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Sundowner

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Joined
Dec 28, 2011
Messages
507
Location
Virgo Supercluster
Format
Multi Format
I've got two boxes of Agfa Brovira, but it evidently hasn't been stored well, and it's printing a grey tone with no exposure. I've had a couple of people suggest using benzotriazole...any thoughts?
 
use them to make lumen prints
put negatives plants &c on them
then a strong uv or sunlight
chemical free, no processing ...
you can over expose them and maybe
a short dip in dilute fix and keep the images
they usually fade after a while so you need to turn
them into numbers...

or you can get a 300 watt light bulb
and contact print large format negs on the paper
process normally

i do both these things with old grey paper
its fun
 
It can be lith'ed, try googling "agfa brovia lith", its not to everybody's tastes and probably isn't good paper to try your first lith print on.
 
I would suggest that you try lumen printing with them. I tried this out last year and was very happy with the results. After fixing the paper I washed it and when dry I scanned them. In PSP I played around with the levels and got some terrific results.
 
Benzotriazole can make things better but it depends on how fogged it is. You'll likely not be able to get back pure white, it just swings it to the usable side. I've found that, at certain level, fogging can act like a pre-flash.
 
Yes, use either benzotriazole or potassium bromide in the developer (say, one ounce of 10% bromide or 1% benzotriazole) to lower the base density. THEN, after fixation, further the base whiteness by using Farmers reducer. The combination of both methods can rectify more paper than one would think. Give more exposure so that the Farmers reducer will not remove too much density. Experiment. - David Lyga
 
It's two 100-sheet boxes, so I've got plenty to play with. I haven't used the reducer, either, so that'll be another thing to add to the list.

Lith prints are very interesting...
 
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