For storage, I recommend brown/amber glass bottles for most chemicals. The are available dirt cheap from Photographers Formulary (among other places) and they're nice because you can buy them in conveniently standardized sizes (1L, 500ml, 250ml, 125ml etc). That makes them versatile for keeping concentrates and stock solutions since you can store developer (for example) in small bottles that hold enough for a single use - that way you don't have partially empty large bottles in which the developer will oxidize faster. Or you can start with your stock solution in a larger bottle (say 1L) and then transfer it to a smaller bottle as it is used so you always minimize the amount of air space. Easy to clean too.
are the brown/amber bottles a must? i figure if i put them in a regular plastic bottle and store them away from light, it is the same effect. the brown/amber is to shield it from light, correct?
Three glass graduated cylinders -- after finding out what acetone does to the plastic ones! But definitely for only my use, not the students -- I need them to last!
A one-gallon SS beaker and a magnetic stirrer has been working in the university darkroom for a long time. Used primarily to mix D-76 and Dektol...and HCA. Stop bath and fixers are from liquid concentrates and are mixed in the bottle. At any one time we aim to have 4 gallons of each on hand, ready to use. A mess of brown gallon bottles for everything, except for the stop bath which is in clearer plastic bottles. Big labels on the bottles, with warnings, etc.
Any toners made up are labeled with needed info, etc. The last thing I want at the end of the year is a bottle of some unlabeled brew left on our shelves!
Vaughn
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