Dusty Negative
Subscriber
I'm close to pounding my noggin against my darkroom wall (thankfully drywall, by the way).
I have frequently been getting this staining around the edges of my Ilford Art 300 paper. It seems to only ever be Art 300, not any other FB or RC paper, though in truth I only enlarge a few times a month so as they say, "give it time."
I *generally* use fresh chemistry when I hit the darkroom. Not because I'm a purist, but rather because I figure the leftover from the last session is probably spent given the infrequency with which I'm in there.
This particular staining, today, showed up just after fixing, even though the fixer had only seen one other 11x14 print and two very small test strips.
Chemistry:
1. Fairly fresh (see above) Sprint paper developer
2. Same age Sprint Stop
3. Same age Sprint Fixer (1:4)
4. Print was in the Fix for 30 seconds, then 15 second drip, then into water wash.
I usually use tap water for all my chemistry, but this time I used distilled for the Fixer. Still didn't seem to rectify the issue.
For the following print after this one, I mixed up fresh Developer, Stop, and Fixer, and saw no staining.
So...is it something in my water, my workflow, the paper, or??? Changing all chemistry every other print seems a bit extreme, even for Art 300.
Here's the staining I'm talking about...I tweaked the contrast so it would show up more. This staining was *only* around the edges, and it was/was around the entire perimeter of the sheet. Thoughts?
I have frequently been getting this staining around the edges of my Ilford Art 300 paper. It seems to only ever be Art 300, not any other FB or RC paper, though in truth I only enlarge a few times a month so as they say, "give it time."
I *generally* use fresh chemistry when I hit the darkroom. Not because I'm a purist, but rather because I figure the leftover from the last session is probably spent given the infrequency with which I'm in there.
This particular staining, today, showed up just after fixing, even though the fixer had only seen one other 11x14 print and two very small test strips.
Chemistry:
1. Fairly fresh (see above) Sprint paper developer
2. Same age Sprint Stop
3. Same age Sprint Fixer (1:4)
4. Print was in the Fix for 30 seconds, then 15 second drip, then into water wash.
I usually use tap water for all my chemistry, but this time I used distilled for the Fixer. Still didn't seem to rectify the issue.
For the following print after this one, I mixed up fresh Developer, Stop, and Fixer, and saw no staining.
So...is it something in my water, my workflow, the paper, or??? Changing all chemistry every other print seems a bit extreme, even for Art 300.
Here's the staining I'm talking about...I tweaked the contrast so it would show up more. This staining was *only* around the edges, and it was/was around the entire perimeter of the sheet. Thoughts?