extremely cheap
As stated, some papers hold up rather well, others with developers incorporated in the emulsion are likely to be fogged. My last box of FB Kodabromide dated 1978 I got at a yard sale held up, it was graded 3 and seemed to print grade 3.
One data point from my personal experience: Graded Agfa Brovira purchased in around 1971 and stored in temperate house ever since is still good. Possibly not exactly the same, it's hard for me to remember the contrast grade after all these years of VC papers since. I develop it in ID-78, a standard Ilford PQ developer.
Agfa Portriga Rapid from the same era or a bit later is totally useless, unfortunately.
One imagines that a cool basement in Sweden would be good for paper storage.
one box of Ilford Multigrade IV RC Deluxe
So there is hope for my Agfa Brovira stored for decades in the basement of my house in mountains.
I have some Agfa Classic Matt paper left over from the 1980s. Absolutely useless.
I have some Agfa Classic Matt paper left over from the 1980s. Absolutely useless.
I have some Agfa Classic Matt paper left over from the 1980s. Absolutely useless.
Generally, papers with "rapid" in the title are all foggy. Agfa Brovira, like Korak's said, is quite a trooper - I have some of that that's 65 or 70 years old and prints extremely well. The slower the paper was when it was new, the more likely it is still good.
Papers I wish you could still buy: Forte Polywarmtone, Kodak Opal/Ektalure (same stuff, basically).
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