Glop Shelf life

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What is the expected shelf life of glop?

Would it be best to coat a bunch of sheets and store them not sensitized of course, or leave it in the pitcher and warm to coat as needed?

The reason I am asking is I have to fit photography in when I can but really want to try carbon.
 

Mike Wilde

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I am lucky in being able to tame the nasty side of gloppies for my cyanotype sizing works. I inherritted a whole ton of organic and inorganic chems from a biotech r&d lab after a bankrupcy interruption in operations.

I have a jar of very carefully stored, pretty potent, biocide that I mix (under very carefully controlled conditions) as a 1% solution, and then mix that as a 10% solution so I am down to a 0.1% solution. Add 20mL of that stuff to the unhardended gelatin, stir it in, and put the gelatin in the fridge.

14 months later, and there is still no sign of ucky goo ilike usually loves to grow in the gelatin.
 
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No potent biocide at my disposal, and not sure I want to use one. Just the name gives me the creeps.
 

Mike Wilde

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I don't have the notes at hand - looked at the card I mixed from last night and I worked out both of these options, but forgot tobring it to work this morning.

I used either Chloramphenicol or Cetylpyriduim Chloride
 

Andrew O'Neill

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Do yourself a favour and pour your tissues right after you make glop. Store the dried tissues in a large ziplock bag. Store in the freezer.
 
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Thanks Andrew.
 

Dan Williams

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I have stored glop with a bit of thymol added as a biocide for 4 to 6 weeks in my refrigerator. I didn't notice any difference in the tissues I made with it. Generally though, I did as Andrew recommends and poured the tissue right away and stuck any tissue I wouldn't be using within a few weeks into the freezer.

If I remember correctly, I got thymol from Photographers Formulary and dissolved the crystals in alcohol making a 30% solution. A few drops added to your glop will keep it from turning into a science project in your refrigerator. Thymol is an ingredient in many brands of mouthwash. I have read posts by others saying that they have used mouthwash as a preservative - Never tried it myself.

Dan
 

Vaughn

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My glop lasts a couple days (kept warm) if I push it, but one might as well pour tissues from all the glop one makes, and make fresh glop for more tissues. My attempts to keep glop in the refrigerator has resulted in smelly biological experiments. I make two or three batches of glop at a time (usually 850ml per batch). Each batch makes three 14x17 tissues.

I dry tissues on cardboard, stuck on with push pins. Once dry (two days in my climate) I just stack the cardboard and use as needed -- usually within a couple months. The push pins keep the surfaces of the tissues from touching anything. They all print fine, but I do notice that the fresher the tissue, the easier the non-exposed gelatin melts...but never to the extent that the gelatin is difficult to melt.

If one's climate is dry, then one might have some problems with the tissue curling and/or cracking. But with a RH of 60 to 70%, that is not a problem here. So Andrew's suggestion of bagging the tissue would be good in areas of low RH.
 

Hexavalent

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Thymol is a cheap and effective way to keep "bugs" from growing in glop. I've discovered a year old container of glop in the back of the fridge that was still clean and usable. Keeping containers, stirrers etc. scrupulously clean, and using sterile (boiled) water lessens the chances of starting off with an inoculated mixture.

Dequalinium (available as an 'oral paint') is also an effective bug killer.
 
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Ok. This brings up another question, the relative humidity here is around an average of somewhere in the teens and often lower. I had read about curling and cracking and that is why I was thinking of saving the glop in the fridge and using as needed. If I make the tissue, dry it and freeze it will it stay flat and not crack.
 

Vaughn

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Just sealing in a bag would probably be enough, if not previously dried to the cracking point.
 
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Thanks
 
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