It depends. If it is what we call malt vinegar in the U.K. then there is danger after 35 years of forming a compulsion for constantly entering fish and chip shops.
pentaxuser
Will malt vinegar result in sepia tinted prints ?

It depends. If it is what we call malt vinegar in the U.K. then there is danger after 35 years of forming a compulsion for constantly entering fish and chip shops.
pentaxuser
A good question. Onions kept in malt vinegar for many weeks to pickle them correctly do go brown but to do the same to prints might mean delaying the fix for a long timeWill malt vinegar result in sepia tinted prints ?![]()
If it were in stock it would be the obvious choice.B&H sells a bottle of Kodak indicator stop bath for $6.49 which makes 8 gallons which works out to $0.81/gallon compared to $2.99/ gallon for generic white vinegar at my grocery story. How much you save using white vinegar, if any, depends on how much you dilute it. I know some people like to use grocery store stuff like coffee as developer and white vinegar as stop bath and whatever for fixer, so maybe cost doesn't play into their calculation, which is okay.
And we all know that stop bath with indicator is just so damned expensive! It is almost as expensive as PhotoFlo!
You realize of course Kodak stop bath is vinegar with indicator, right? And also that the indicator is superfluous?
Careful use of film, also chemistry and paper in my darkroom has always been my way.
By my own reckoning, I'e used three one-liter bottles of Kodak indicator stop bath since I first set up a darkroom - in 1961.
The current bottle I have I bought in 1991. It was my second bottle.
Nothing anyone has said so far in this thread has "influenced" me to change...
A 2% solution of white vinegar makes for a perfect stop bath.For those who have garnered consistent results from using vinegar in film/print processing, what type (cider, distilled white, etc.) is recommended, and should it be diluted or not?
Used to use just plain water and plan on doing this again once I get started again. Kodak indicator stop bath stinks and burns holes in my clothes!
Used to use just plain water and plan on doing this again once I get started again. Kodak indicator stop bath stinks and burns holes in my clothes!
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