charlemagne
Member
How exactly does "bleach to completion" look? I associate bleach with something that looks white. Whill it look white? Or will it look like a blank, transparent film?
Thanks, Doremus, I may end up trying this once with some underdeveloped negs, but probably with some Catechol based developer. Can you give some numbers from experience, how many paper grades you gain from this kind of post treatment?
@charlemagne : "bleach to completion" typically leaves behind a faint to medium brown image, especially in the darker sections of your image. My impression is that this brown image is stronger if the paper is bleached a long time after initial processing, so it may be due to some buildup of Silver Sulfide.
It looks like you found out that Rodinal isn't really immortal. I also found out the hard way, after listening to people on the internet claim it never goes bad. BTDT. If it's dark brown and the last bit of the bottle, it could well be bad. It does last forever in individual small glass bottles though, but oxygen will kill it, and that includes being the dregs in the bottom of a mostly empty bottle.
HC110 pretty much does last forever, but not Rodinal.
Rudeofus: thanks for the explanation.
OP: have you tried the chromium intensifier and/or the sepia toner yet? I am curious to hear how your negatives came out.
Is there somebody who can give some information about the archival quality or permanence of (chromium) intensified negatives?
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