Mixing things up (lith prints and hypo fixer rant)

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Jerevan

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During the past few weeks I have done 20 - 25 lith prints, fixing them in plain hypo that I mixed up. Tonight I realize that mixed up is the correct wording ... because Mr Chemist himself poured in 10 gram rather than say 100 gram to a liter of water. :whistling:

So, refixing is what I'll do pronto and hope nothing's gone to waste. Sometimes you just learn things the hard way. :D

The reason I started with the hypo was that I can see bleaching and loss of colour on the prints. I don't know if anyone else is seeing this with normal fixers and lith prints?
 

Rich Ullsmith

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Yes, you will get bleaching. If you work under the same darkroom light conditions long enough, you can eventually judge a snatch point that will bleach back to where you would like it to be. That said, I have found that even massive amounts of exposure won't flatten the print out enough. Please try pre-exposing the paper, and I don't just mean flashing it. I use a portable light box for anywhere from 5-15 seconds, in addition to massive exposure. All papers are different, but I think the value of pre-exposing (or post exposing . . .sometimes I do it in the developer tray at early stages of development) in lith is underappreciated.

If you take a look at my gallery, most of those prints have been pre-exposed to some degree.
 
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Jerevan

Jerevan

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Thanks for the tips, Rich! I'll have a look at your gallery and try the pre-exposure idea.

In the case of "a few weeks" I mean 5-10 days maximum. It is not so much the bleaching as the loss of colour that I mourn. I'll refix anyway, for my own peace of mind.
 

An Le-qun

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A related question: does the extent of bleaching in fixer perhaps depend to some degree on the developer used? I noticed none when developing Forte PolyWT FB in Arista lith chemicals or LD20, but quite a bit when I used Dupont LD-1 (with formalin + sodium hydroxide instead of Paraformaldehyde). An unpleasant surprise, but--as already observed--manageable once you get used to it.
 
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