Still, every time someone questioned the use of selenium toner their threads were met with disapproval.There are some chems you should probably really avoid, like Selenium toner
Still, every time someone questioned the use of selenium toner their threads were met with disapproval.There are some chems you should probably really avoid, like Selenium toner
It's the proper handling of selenium toner (and every other darkroom chemical) that really matters; not whether to use it or not.Still, every time someone questioned the use of selenium toner their threads were met with disapproval.
The "disapproval" you refer to is likely just people saying that selenium toner is just fine if you use it properly. I ascribe to this point of view. The same applies to Metol (see, I'm getting back on topic).
Best,
Doremus
If you can be confident and comfortable fulfilling the necessary precautions and proper use of these chemicals, including selenium toner, then there isn't a real problem. It is misuse, carelessness and improper disposal of chemistry that causes the problems.
The "disapproval" you refer to is likely just people saying that selenium toner is just fine if you use it properly. I ascribe to this point of view. The same applies to Metol (see, I'm getting back on topic).
A datacenter may require thousands of gallons of water per day, but that water is not consumed, and it is not single use.
Or buy Kosher salt...Domestic use salt contains additives, often including a little titanium oxide whitener as well as iodine. For darkroom use, specify pure sodium chloride instead.
Are you talking about selenium liquid toner that you can buy from Ilford or making it from raw chemicals? If it is the former case this Ilford video on its use didn't seem to indicate any reason why it should be off the list. Yes she suggests taking the precaution of gloves and safety glasses but is that a reason for it being "off the list"?, but Selenium toner should be off the list.
Are you talking about selenium liquid toner that you can buy from Ilford or making it from raw chemicals? If it is the former case this Ilford video on its use didn't seem to indicate any reason why it should be off the list. Yes she suggests taking the precaution of gloves and safety glasses but is that a reason for it being "off the list"?
Almost everything is toxic to some degree, depending on the amount. We need trace amounts of many metals and minerals.
I was simply curious so thanks and should be "off the list" for everyone on the basis that it is a chemical that can be genuinely singled out from all the others as incapable of safe disposal or might it be that that in your area the disposal method as you described is not the best/safest method
Yes the OP did use this phrase: "I am trying to get my black and white photography as green as possible. Yah, I know that sounds funny."
I suppose it all depends on how far you wish to take it and I agree it is impossible to know what the limit of "as green as possible" is from this statement In the case of Selenium toner and indeed other chemicals used in photography the "green as possible" route might be to ban the sale of it completely or indeed the sale of anything else whose use "purely for pleasure" can be shown to be harmful in even the slightest way
Or do we go the route of trying to weigh the extent of the harmful effects against the likely extent of that chemical's use and then deciding if those limits of use can reasonably to coped with by "the world as a whole"
I think we can agree that in its liquid form and with the use of gloves and safety glasses to prevent splashes in the eyes Selenium can be handled perfectly safely
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Selenium toning was part of the regular archival darkroom printing process, so obviously it can be done in a personally safe way. The original question revolved about environmental impact, which is a completely different story.
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