If mounting boards and mats are buffered
should not the print itself? Seems only
reasonable. Dan
should not the print itself? Seems only
reasonable. Dan
If mounting boards and mats are buffered
should not the print itself? Seems only
reasonable. Dan
FB photo papers are buffered,
What of RC papers?
I am under the impression(not a chemist),that all wood pulp based paper will eventually turn acidic,
regardless of what type or how much (chemical) buffer is used.I am also under the impression that the reason they started using a baryta
coating ,is to (physically)buffer the emulsion from the paper after they changed from cotton rag/linen paper to wood pulp.
This is essentially correct, wood pulp based papers will eventually turn acidic. However, the time frame for well-made papers can be on the order of several hundred years. Wikipedia, under Acid-free papers, has a good description of this. The roll of buffered materials for packaging, storage, mounting, matting, etc, is to provide a material which has a reserve of alkalinity which can absorb acids whether there originally or as they form either through decomposition or from environmental factors.
However, this is not the reason for the original use of baryta coatings which started prior to 1900. The conversion from rag to wood pulp began in the mid-1920's and, for Kodak (the only one I'm qualified to speak on) was completed for most papers in the early 1930s.
You can find more about baryta and issues with conversion from rag to wood pulp at:
www.notesonphotographs.org
---yeah,but what is the magical quality that makes baryta paper so archival?
but even then how accurately they represent how the products will fare is IMHO kind of iffy... there are just too many variables to control for the average photgrapher... institutions have more hope. Anyway, the data is around, I think someone will find something and post it, if not I will look up the most recent data I have. There is probably recent data that I have not seen, at least from the last 10 years.Well, there IS such a thing as good enough...practically
every step of the photographic process is a value judgment
over what is "good enough". That's why having some actual
data would be nice, so that everyone could make the "good
enough" judgment an informed one.
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