[pure-silver] Re: Amidol and oxidization
- From: Daniel Williams <dtwilliams3@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- To: pure-silver@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
- Date: Sat, 23 May 2009 12:31:17 -0700
Michael,
I am receiving your posts with no problems. I today I got this one as
well as your previous one that was the same except for the first line.
I don't know if it could be a problem with some email program. I am
using the Windows version of Thunderbird.
Dan Williams
Michael A. Smith and Paula Chamlee wrote:
For some reason, the responses I make are coming through with the
message that there are encoding errors and/or attachments are probably
corrupt. This has never happened to me before, so I am re-sending with
everything but my response deleted.
Michael A. Smith
I sent this to the Pur-Silver list, but it has not come through--at
least not to me.
Ah, misconceptions about Amidol still abound. Frankly, I am
astonished, since my writing about this has been out there for 13
years now. With my Amidol formula, Amidol will last all day. All day
is 8, 10, 12 hours--however long you can print at one time. There is
no fall-off in the activity of it until there is almost none left.
Usually, I use it until there is not enough left in the tray to cover
the prints. It makes no difference if I am using 1 liter, 3 liters, or
4 liters.
I once knew a fellow at RIT who was considered the best printer at the
school. He told me that when he used Amidol he first ran about a dozen
sheets through it so it would get "sludgy."
So, Bogdan, relax about the life of working Amidol solution.
We have even left it in an open tray overnight, after an almost
all-day printing session--when there was still some left, and used it
the next day. When you do this, it will only last for a half-dozen
prints at most, and is not quite as active as when new. it is perfect
when, for example, a grade 3 paper is slightly too contrasty. Printing
it in the next day's Amidol tones the contrast down about 1/4 to 1/3
grade of paper and makes the print perfect. I always print one of my
popular photographs using this "technique," if one can call it a
technique.
Also, the Amidol I have was put into the bottles in either 1906 or
1908, I forget which. It is very black (obviously "oxidized." If
anyone on this list has seen my prints, or Paula's prints, it will
become immediately obvious that there is nothing wrong with the
"oxidized" Amidol.
Michael A. Smith
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