grainyvision
Subscriber
So today in a variety of lith printing formulation experiments (read: failures) I decided to attempt to remove what appears to be hydroquinone stain by using oxalic acid (sulfite didn't work, but maybe acid would strip it, and oxalic acid was what I could find quickly). However, I had just taken the print out of my (well used) TF-4 fixer and didn't really think about washing it first since it was ruined anyway. I poured a tiny bit of 5% oxalic acid solution onto the print and where I poured a very purple tone came up. This also surprisingly did remove the yellow staining from the unexposed border and only changed the tone on where there was an image. I decided to try this on a few different bad prints I had on hand. Oxalic acid on its own did nothing to any print. If I dripped a bit of fixer and then the oxalic acid onto it though, it worked. Note I did no bleaching of these images and the color intensified slightly with washing, it did not wash out over 1 hour with running water. Results:
* Ilford MGV normal print -- changed image tone to reddish brown, like sepia
* Ilford MGFB normal print -- changed image tone to reddish brown, but unlike with the RC paper it produced a subtle reddish tint to whites (color difference also could've been due to this print already being fairly well washed)
* Ilford MGFB lith print -- removed yellow staining (restoring borders to white) and turned a very deep purple color, like a fully selenium toned print. Also intensified the image quite noticeably
* Arista.EDU Ultra FB lith print -- removed yellow staining, intensified image slightly and gave a distinctly blue tone to the image and slightly changed blacks to a very cool brown. Reminds me of a fully gold toned print.
Also, note that when doing this the sulfite in TF-4 will break down in acid and produce sulfur dioxide gas that is quite irritating and very unhealthy. If a drop of TF-4 is put into oxalic acid it produces a white precipitate.
Anyway, I'm trying to make sense of what is happening here and if there is someway to exploit it, and more importantly, if it's a stable "toning" method that might be possible. It seems plausible that neutralizing TF-4 may produce sodium sulfide, ie, sepia toner, but sulfide does nothing if the print isn't bleached first. It also never produced the blue and purple colors like I've seen. My fear is that it might be creating silver oxalate, which is a sensitive explosive. The small amount within a print is nothing to worry about, but it would definitely mean it's not archival. Anyone with enough chemistry knowledge here to take a guess at what could be happening? Also I'm not sure if the acid being oxalic is important or if TF-4 neutralized with any acid would have a similar effect. Unfortunately didn't have time to test it really.
* Ilford MGV normal print -- changed image tone to reddish brown, like sepia
* Ilford MGFB normal print -- changed image tone to reddish brown, but unlike with the RC paper it produced a subtle reddish tint to whites (color difference also could've been due to this print already being fairly well washed)
* Ilford MGFB lith print -- removed yellow staining (restoring borders to white) and turned a very deep purple color, like a fully selenium toned print. Also intensified the image quite noticeably
* Arista.EDU Ultra FB lith print -- removed yellow staining, intensified image slightly and gave a distinctly blue tone to the image and slightly changed blacks to a very cool brown. Reminds me of a fully gold toned print.
Also, note that when doing this the sulfite in TF-4 will break down in acid and produce sulfur dioxide gas that is quite irritating and very unhealthy. If a drop of TF-4 is put into oxalic acid it produces a white precipitate.
Anyway, I'm trying to make sense of what is happening here and if there is someway to exploit it, and more importantly, if it's a stable "toning" method that might be possible. It seems plausible that neutralizing TF-4 may produce sodium sulfide, ie, sepia toner, but sulfide does nothing if the print isn't bleached first. It also never produced the blue and purple colors like I've seen. My fear is that it might be creating silver oxalate, which is a sensitive explosive. The small amount within a print is nothing to worry about, but it would definitely mean it's not archival. Anyone with enough chemistry knowledge here to take a guess at what could be happening? Also I'm not sure if the acid being oxalic is important or if TF-4 neutralized with any acid would have a similar effect. Unfortunately didn't have time to test it really.