Sodium Sulfate?

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pgomena

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I recently was given a sealed gallon jar of sodium sulfate. Big, thick, light-brown flakes. I have never used this chemical in photographic processing and outside of perhaps a toner formula, I don't know what it might be used for. Would someone clue me in please?
 

dE fENDER

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It's rather useless in photography. It can be added to some b/w film developer at about 20-40g per liter, if you are going to develop at high temperature (25-30 C) as emulsion hardener.
 

Gerald C Koch

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Doesn't sound like sodium sulfate but more like sodium sulfide. The sulfate would never be brown flakes. The description sounds more like sodium sulfide especially if a toner formula is given on the jar.
 

Bob Carnie

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I recently was given a sealed gallon jar of sodium sulfate. Big, thick, light-brown flakes. I have never used this chemical in photographic processing and outside of perhaps a toner formula, I don't know what it might be used for. Would someone clue me in please?
If it smells like rotten eggs then it probablly is sodium sulfide, use in sepia toning
 
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pgomena

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My mistake, it is indeed sodium sulfide. I now have enough of that ingredient to make a boatload of sepia toner, I guess.
 

Rudeofus

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Yes, sepia toner for prints, and for black&white slides, of course. Please look at safety and handling instructions carefully, Sodium Sulfide is not your friend if you don't treat it nicely: keep in firmly sealed container sitting in a cool, dry place, solutions always alkaline, not neutral or acidic, ideally used in tanks, not trays. Hydrogen Sulfide is about as toxic as Hydrogen Cyanide!
 

jim appleyard

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Isn't this the chemical you're supoposed to keep away from photo materials like paper and film? IIRC, this stuff will fog film & paper.
 
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pgomena

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Aha! Well, since it's sealed, I'll leave it that way and pass it on to someone who wants it.
 

darkroommike

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Can it also be used in second developers for reversal processing. If you want a browntone?
 

Gerald C Koch

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Can it also be used in second developers for reversal processing. If you want a browntone?

Yes several uses. It can be used to produce very lovely sepia colored slides. It will act as a fogging developer. You can also use it to test for residual silver in film and prints. Also to tone prints.
 
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