dpurdy
Member
So cleaning and organizing and sorting through old boxes of paper and running tests to see how viable they are for platinum printing, I ran across a box of silver gel paper made by Kodak in the 1940s. The box says "AD TYPE A-1". It is single weight 11x14 paper with a beautiful sheen on the emulsion side. I've kept for many years thinking that the paper side might be good as a platinum printing base. Today I decided I should run a test and see. I have had it for over 40 years and never considered it viable as a silver printing paper. I have opened it in the light multiple times and thumbed through it and never thought I should keep it in the dark. I researched it and I think it is from 1949. Way too old to be viable.
So I coated the back of one of the sheets with pure palladium, and then dried it with a hair dryer, and then humidified it with a pan of hot water and then put a negative on it and exposed for 6 minutes in ultra violet light and it came out with a beautifully smooth image. But when I turned it over in a tray of water there was the image beautifully exposed on the emulsion side. The image was mirror image and it was a positive image rather than negative. I am flabbergasted. I don't know how to account for that. Now I have to do some testing to see if a platinum developed image can be fixed in silver fixer and try to understand what I am looking at.
So I coated the back of one of the sheets with pure palladium, and then dried it with a hair dryer, and then humidified it with a pan of hot water and then put a negative on it and exposed for 6 minutes in ultra violet light and it came out with a beautifully smooth image. But when I turned it over in a tray of water there was the image beautifully exposed on the emulsion side. The image was mirror image and it was a positive image rather than negative. I am flabbergasted. I don't know how to account for that. Now I have to do some testing to see if a platinum developed image can be fixed in silver fixer and try to understand what I am looking at.