juan
Member
Diffusion as Ralph said. I have good negatives, more than 50-years old, that were washed by soaking in a container with water dribbling in.
I am using the 5, 10, 15, 20 method with city water for washing film. After you pour out the fixer, fill with 68 degree F water and invert 5 times with a spin on each inversion. Repeat for the 10, 15 and 20 inversion cycles. (550 ml of water each cycle.) Since there are four (4) total emptyings, then 4 x 550 is 2200 ml of water for this phase. The final rinse is when the reel is taken out of the tank and put into a rinse bucket and put 550 ml of distilled water in it and then a 1/2 ml of Ilfotol or Wetting agent of your choice. I just use my fingers to finish with multiple downward wiping and dunking into the water/Ifotol bath. I then hang them up to dry (at an angle) in the dust free drying cabinet. They have all come out, so far, with no water marks, etc. So, with this method the total water usage is 5 x 550 ml = 2750 ml of water. I hope this answers your question, albeit not so brief.Have just processed 5 rolls of 120 film this morning and as I was washing them I started to think about the amount of water I use when printing and processing my B&W work.
Water restrictions are coming into effect yet again in South Australia this summer (and also over this past winter!!) and I want to reduce the amount of H2O I use as much as possible. I do use a print washer, but even then it seems to use copious amounts or am I imagining things??
How do you wash your prints and films to use the least amount of water possible?
I am using the 5, 10, 15, 20 method with city water for washing film. After you pour out the fixer, fill with 68 degree F water and invert 5 times with a spin on each inversion. Repeat for the 10, 15 and 20 inversion cycles. (550 ml of water each cycle.) Since there are four (4) total emptyings, then 4 x 550 is 2200 ml of water for this phase. The final rinse is when the reel is taken out of the tank and put into a rinse bucket and put 550 ml of distilled water in it and then a 1/2 ml of Ilfotol or Wetting agent of your choice. I just use my fingers to finish with multiple downward wiping and dunking into the water/Ifotol bath. I then hang them up to dry (at an angle) in the dust free drying cabinet. They have all come out, so far, with no water marks, etc. So, with this method the total water usage is 5 x 550 ml = 2750 ml of water. I hope this answers your question, albeit not so brief.
I will admit that I haven’t read through this entire thread, I did read a few pages but not quite the whole thing. Didn’t find the answer here, so....
I’m wondering if I’m washing film and prints using a dump method, like filling a Patterson tank 5-6 times and dumping it, by about the 2nd or 3rd dump can I reuse this water? Like on my garden or something? I know it’s fixer that I’m washing off, but surely it’s so diluted that it’s safe to put in a garden right?? I feel terrible letting it go down the sink.
I will admit that I haven’t read through this entire thread, I did read a few pages but not quite the whole thing. Didn’t find the answer here, so....
I’m wondering if I’m washing film and prints using a dump method, like filling a Patterson tank 5-6 times and dumping it, by about the 2nd or 3rd dump can I reuse this water? Like on my garden or something? I know it’s fixer that I’m washing off, but surely it’s so diluted that it’s safe to put in a garden right?? I feel terrible letting it go down the sink.
but I recall having read somewhere that Selenium, like the one found in K.R.S.T., in the right amount, is good for a rose garden. So, if you last bath is a Selenium treatment, perhaps then the rinsing water can be used for cultivating nicer roses?
you might want to contact people in your locale, no one here can answer that because no one here knows the rules/regulations where you live.
i know of people who were heavily misinformed about all sorts of things told to them by photography gurus and helpful people on the internet,
and they turned their yard into a brownfield/superfund site.
good luck!
I will admit that I haven’t read through this entire thread, I did read a few pages but not quite the whole thing. Didn’t find the answer here, so....
I’m wondering if I’m washing film and prints using a dump method, like filling a Patterson tank 5-6 times and dumping it, by about the 2nd or 3rd dump can I reuse this water? Like on my garden or something? I know it’s fixer that I’m washing off, but surely it’s so diluted that it’s safe to put in a garden right?? I feel terrible letting it go down the sink.
please do not suggest to people to dump toxic waste into their gardens or do anything but dispose of it in accordance to their local laws. there are trace amounts of selenium in many things ( brazil nuts, vitamins, shampoos, sea water ) the difference is the amounts found in photo chemicals is not TRACE amounts. if you consume too many brazil nuts you get selenium poisoning, and its not pretty.
Well, yes, you are right, but, I was just quoting what I haded read. But, yes again, that's not a very valuable excuse, so I retract my words.
Any idea how many nuts? I must admit that in the U.K. I have never seen any warning on packets of Brazil nuts e about not exceeding X number of Brazil nuts in one session. I assume that it isn't cumulative in the sense that there is a limit to how many Brazil nuts you can consume in your lifetime or is there? .if you consume too many brazil nuts you get selenium poisoning, and its not pretty.
Any idea how many nuts?
I will admit that I haven’t read through this entire thread, I did read a few pages but not quite the whole thing. Didn’t find the answer here, so....
I’m wondering if I’m washing film and prints using a dump method, like filling a Patterson tank 5-6 times and dumping it, by about the 2nd or 3rd dump can I reuse this water? Like on my garden or something? I know it’s fixer that I’m washing off, but surely it’s so diluted that it’s safe to put in a garden right?? I feel terrible letting it go down the sink.
The Ilfordmethod saves a lot of aterbut is too slow for me. I leave the film in the tank and run he water for 10min at 1 filling /min. that isn't much more water than the Ilford method and takes just a little longer but is thouroughly washed.Have just processed 5 rolls of 120 film this morning and as I was washing them I started to think about the amount of water I use when printing and processing my B&W work.
Water restrictions are coming into effect yet again in South Australia this summer (and also over this past winter!!) and I want to reduce the amount of H2O I use as much as possible. I do use a print washer, but even then it seems to use copious amounts or am I imagining things??
How do you wash your prints and films to use the least amount of water possible?
Does someone have a reference for the Ilford water change method? I can't find it on the Ilford site. Thanks!
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