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Kodak sensitized paper

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dario

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Hi folks

I'm not sure if this is the right forum, but I'll give it a try.

I recently acquired a box of "Kodak Sensitized Paper". It came in a tin box that was completely sealed and required a key to open it, rather like an old sardine tin before the days of rip tops. Inside that was a regular cardbood box. See the attached.

I suspect it might be 50-100 years old.

On opening the box, the paper appeared to be in good condition, so I experimented and found:

1. It's completely insensitive to tungsten light.

2. Exposing it to daylight (with a neg in a contact printing frame) for about 1 second and developing in Dektol produces an image. The image is neutral black and white, just like a normal modern monochrome print. The image appeared rapidly and I had to take the print out of the developer long before the usual 2 minutes (but perhaps just because I'd over exposed it).

3. Exposing it to daylight (open shade on a sunny day) for about two hours produced a distinct, but not very strong, image of an orangy-brown colour.

So what have I got? My guess is that it's a chloride paper, but it seems too insensitive to be used as a regular printing-out paper, although I have no knowledge of how long typical printing-out exposures were. How would it have been used, given that it's insensitive to tungsten light? And what would it have been used for?

I'd appreciate any information.

Thanks.
 

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MDR

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You've got Eastman chloride waterproof printing or as the name says Eastman Kind 1019. It was still used in the 1940's. Can't really find more info on the paper
 

AgX

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The outer package is made of sheet metal?
 
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dario

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Thanks for the replies.

AgX: The outer container is (I think) tin plate (thin tin-plated steel). It had been soldered shut, so was completely air-tight.

Cheers :smile:
 

Rick A

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I believe it was for contact printing and required long exposures. I would be curious to see a print made on a sheet.
 
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dario

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Here's my first attempt at printing out (two different exposures).

IMG_3924.JPG
 

Rick A

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Is that an enlargment or contact print? What developer did you use?
 
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dario

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It's a contact, printed-out (no developer) image from a 4x5 neg. About two hours exposure in open shade.

It appears now that the paper I have is a contact paper (albeit rather slow) rather than a printing-out paper.
 
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