mrtoml
Member
As many of you know I have been using Ilford RC paper and following the instructions pretty much to the letter. I was kindly given a pack of Ilford FB warmtone to try and I have been itching to see the difference that everyone talks about.
My problem is the wash process for the FB. There seem to be a lot of different opinions. At present I have acquired a Paterson RC print washer which I will use for my first attempts. My questions are these:
I see that Ilford suggest a rather shortened wash process of around 20 minutes using washaid inbetween, but some people seem to think this is unsafe. Has anyone tested this thoroughly. Or can I take Ilford's word for it even with non-Ilford papers?
I use alkaline fix for film (I use Pyro). If I use this fix for FB paper what difference does it make - ie does it reduce the time and what happens if some residual alkali fix is left (I assume it is the acid in the acid fix that is the problem from an archival point of view)?
Further to this does a testing kit for residual fix in prints still work if alkaline fixer was used? I would ultimately like to test the safety of my processes.
Thanks and regards,
My problem is the wash process for the FB. There seem to be a lot of different opinions. At present I have acquired a Paterson RC print washer which I will use for my first attempts. My questions are these:
I see that Ilford suggest a rather shortened wash process of around 20 minutes using washaid inbetween, but some people seem to think this is unsafe. Has anyone tested this thoroughly. Or can I take Ilford's word for it even with non-Ilford papers?
I use alkaline fix for film (I use Pyro). If I use this fix for FB paper what difference does it make - ie does it reduce the time and what happens if some residual alkali fix is left (I assume it is the acid in the acid fix that is the problem from an archival point of view)?
Further to this does a testing kit for residual fix in prints still work if alkaline fixer was used? I would ultimately like to test the safety of my processes.
Thanks and regards,