Campos & Davis Photos (photos@campos-davis.co.uk)
Thu, 01 Jul 1999 15:18:25 +0100
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Campos & Davis Photos
6 Cranbourne Road
London N10 2BT
Tel/Fax + 44 181 883 8638
email: photos@campos-davis.co.uk
WEB SITE: http://www.campos-davis.co.uk
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From: EddyWillems <eddy.willems@worldonline.be>
To: alt-photo-process-l@skyway.usask.ca
Subject: Re: stop-fixer
Date: Wednesday, 30 June, 1999 9:56 PM
See Camera Arts november/december 1981
Brushes with Light, picturres by Denny Moers
p 88 - 95
you can fix the print afterwards, hypo etc.
-----Oorspronkelijk bericht-----
Van: dean kansky <dkansky@hotmail.com>
Aan: alt-photo-process-l@skyway.usask.ca
<alt-photo-process-l@skyway.usask.ca>
Datum: woensdag 30 juni 1999 21:43
Onderwerp: stop-fixer
>The other day I was making photograms ( silver). My stop bath and fixer
were
>shot, yet I had a few sheets of paper left. So I exposed the last few and
>painted on the developer. In so doing, I left potions of the paper
>undeveloped (untouched by developer). I then placed the print in stop bath
>and fixer (both of which, as I said, were shot). After doing so, however,
I
>noticed that the undeveloped portion of the print had turned a wonderful
>DARK yellow.
>
>Was it the exhausted stop or fixer that turned the print yellow?
>
>Since I liked the prints, I re-freshed the fixer and re-fixed them. Will
>this save the print from the fate of prints that are ill fixed?
>
>If not, I would like to dye the print the dark yellow color I got (with
the
>"stain" from the stop/fixer). Can anybody recommend some process that
might
>let me archive this color?
>
>
>Thanks,
> Dean
>
>
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