Tom Taylor
Member
The Cookbook formula for Kodak Gp-2 gold protective toner calls for "Kodak Thiourea." Is this that same as "regular" Thiourea or is it a special proprietary Thiourea? I searched online and could find no reference to it.
Is this that same as "regular" Thiourea
I'd assume so. The thiourea-gold toner I've always used works fine with plain old thiourea in any case. I don't know what would have to be 'Kodak' about it.
It might be a packaging of Thiourea that is of a particular concentration/purity/density.
If so, the measurements in that recipe would be somewhat dependent on using it.
Or it could have been Kodak branding every thing photo related that they could. It's a bit like a flashlight made by a battery company with instructions to only replace the batteries with their brand.
It might be a packaging of Thiourea that is of a particular concentration/purity/density.
I reckon this is a case of Kodak slapping yellow stickers on everything they could, as @Quiver2 suggests above.
If it says "thiorea" on the package, then it should be ~100% pure. No?
In theory different companies products could be substituted. I wikipedia ed Metol....
"Aktien-Gesellschaft für Anilinfabrikation (AGFA) sold this compound under the trade name Metol, which became by far the most common name, followed by Eastman Kodak's trade name Elon."
Compared with Metol, Elon has a slightly musky whiff.
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