Paul Verizzo
Member
Lately, I've been doing reading in Haist and other places about fixing and washing. One of the topics is that on ships the print wash has usually been salt water, and because of that, it was discovered how simple salts can rid the print of hypo.
My father was a Photographers Mate on two ships in the Coast Guard in WWII. Over the past year I have been scanning several thousand images, personal and professional, of our family. See www.vphotoestate.com , it's a work in progress, no photos up yet but you can get the drift of the project. A few weeks ago I discovered - again! - four boxes of 4x5 prints of his time on those two ships. I had seen about a fourth of them before, usually enlarged. I'm guessing that these 450 images were contact printed, wow, the detail even enlarged.
OK, OK, I'm getting there. It dawned on me that every one of these prints is in perfect condition! Compare that to many of his and his father's images done 1900-1938 in studio conditions. A lot of those show hypo degradations. If nothing else, a general yellowing. But the shipboard photos, perfect! (Not all of the old photos have the degradation, but many do.)
My father, age 90 and with Alzheimer's, can't remember if the wash was fresh or salt. Of course, I can't remember what I ate for breakfast......
What say you? About salt water washing, not my breakfast.
My father was a Photographers Mate on two ships in the Coast Guard in WWII. Over the past year I have been scanning several thousand images, personal and professional, of our family. See www.vphotoestate.com , it's a work in progress, no photos up yet but you can get the drift of the project. A few weeks ago I discovered - again! - four boxes of 4x5 prints of his time on those two ships. I had seen about a fourth of them before, usually enlarged. I'm guessing that these 450 images were contact printed, wow, the detail even enlarged.
OK, OK, I'm getting there. It dawned on me that every one of these prints is in perfect condition! Compare that to many of his and his father's images done 1900-1938 in studio conditions. A lot of those show hypo degradations. If nothing else, a general yellowing. But the shipboard photos, perfect! (Not all of the old photos have the degradation, but many do.)
My father, age 90 and with Alzheimer's, can't remember if the wash was fresh or salt. Of course, I can't remember what I ate for breakfast......
What say you? About salt water washing, not my breakfast.


