I'm scanning a few rolls of old (black and white, ~50 years old) negatives for a friend and the latest shows what I would describe as "silvering out" on the emulsion side.
That is, it shows a quite reflective silver-blue sheen on the first half-dozen or so frames. It is FP3, by the way.
They are not intrinsically valuable, but they are part of a family archive only recently come to light, so I would want to be quite conservative. I'll be making contact sheets anyway
I'm presuming this is as a result of insufficient, or otherwise improper, fixing and/or washing plus poor storage, though I'm not clear what the mechanism is (is it the formation of Silver sulphide?)
Is there anything that can be usefully done to help, if not to remove the problem, then at least to stabilise the situation so it does not worsen?
I have searched and found the odd suggestion that rapid fixer + citric acid might ameliorate the problem (at the expense of some density).
If the best advice is, scan them then put them in fresh archival sleeves, that's fine.
thanks in advance for any informed advice
That is, it shows a quite reflective silver-blue sheen on the first half-dozen or so frames. It is FP3, by the way.
They are not intrinsically valuable, but they are part of a family archive only recently come to light, so I would want to be quite conservative. I'll be making contact sheets anyway
I'm presuming this is as a result of insufficient, or otherwise improper, fixing and/or washing plus poor storage, though I'm not clear what the mechanism is (is it the formation of Silver sulphide?)
Is there anything that can be usefully done to help, if not to remove the problem, then at least to stabilise the situation so it does not worsen?
I have searched and found the odd suggestion that rapid fixer + citric acid might ameliorate the problem (at the expense of some density).
If the best advice is, scan them then put them in fresh archival sleeves, that's fine.
thanks in advance for any informed advice