Hi all,
Well, although I generally am very careful and try to avoid contact with photochemicals as much as possible, after working with this stuff for 5 years, the unavoidable happened today, I threw over a bottle of - working solution - selenium toner today, spilling about 1.5 litre onto the floor of my darkroom and a large spill over my hand... Of course, as always with these things, not the harmless stopbath or something, but the rather more nasty stuff.
After doing the rather obvious of first cleaning my hands thoroughly with soap and water, I than witnessed in dismay the mess on the ground...
Luckily, my "darkroom" is my bathroom, so it has a stone floor, keeping the solution from soaking into something. It also luckily didn't run under the washing machine, which would have been a further nuisance for cleaning up.
Just to be certain, I had quick look at the Material Safety Data Sheet for selenium toner, that, besides the obvious conclusion "don't swallow it", did fortunately not make me run for first aid regarding short skin contact... although this "accident" is not something I want to repeat soon.
I than got a pair of gloves and a mop, collecting it all and bottling up for proper disposal, throwing away the gloves and mop afterwards.
When was the last time you had an "accident" and what did you need to do to clean up the mess (personal and material)?
Marco
Well, although I generally am very careful and try to avoid contact with photochemicals as much as possible, after working with this stuff for 5 years, the unavoidable happened today, I threw over a bottle of - working solution - selenium toner today, spilling about 1.5 litre onto the floor of my darkroom and a large spill over my hand... Of course, as always with these things, not the harmless stopbath or something, but the rather more nasty stuff.
After doing the rather obvious of first cleaning my hands thoroughly with soap and water, I than witnessed in dismay the mess on the ground...
Luckily, my "darkroom" is my bathroom, so it has a stone floor, keeping the solution from soaking into something. It also luckily didn't run under the washing machine, which would have been a further nuisance for cleaning up.Just to be certain, I had quick look at the Material Safety Data Sheet for selenium toner, that, besides the obvious conclusion "don't swallow it", did fortunately not make me run for first aid regarding short skin contact... although this "accident" is not something I want to repeat soon.
I than got a pair of gloves and a mop, collecting it all and bottling up for proper disposal, throwing away the gloves and mop afterwards.
When was the last time you had an "accident" and what did you need to do to clean up the mess (personal and material)?

Marco
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but since I habitually don't read instructions....
