Re: dichromate stain

From: Katharine Thayer ^lt;kthayer@pacifier.com>
Date: 06/15/04-03:09:12 AM Z
Message-id: <40CEBCB2.35A2@pacifier.com>

Well, that's good and cool. If you were using warm or hot water, I would
have suspected the temperature might have something to do with it, but
since I use pretty cold water myself, especially in the winter, I don't
know....
kt

Kate Mahoney wrote:
>
> At the moment our studio wash is running at 10 deg C - really too low &
> the plumber has been called...God knows what it's doing to our F.B.
> prints!
>
> Kate
>
> Kate Mahoney Photography
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Katharine Thayer [mailto:kthayer@pacifier.com]
> Sent: Tuesday, 15 June 2004 11:03 a.m.
> To: alt-photo-process-l@sask.usask.ca
> Subject: Re: dichromate stain
>
> Kate Mahoney wrote:
> >
> > I do usually develop over an hour or so, two 5-min baths, then 10,
> then
> > 30 in running water. I have noticed however that in the first two
> baths
> > sometimes the dichromate migrates to the upward (back side) of the
> > paper....and turning it over in subsequent baths removes most of the
> > stain. Maybe it's the water TEMPERATURE????????
>
> >
>
> What temperature do you develop your prints at? I don't mean exactly,
> but cold, cool, room temp, warm?
> kt
>
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Received on Tue Jun 15 10:06:02 2004

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