Do a little research and think twice before destroying pix of politicians!
Getty et alia might be interested.
On April 26, 2019 at 6:54 AM Bill Riley <bill@xxxxxxxxxxx
mailto:bill@xxxxxxxxxxx ;> wrote:
Thanks. Bleach is a good idea. I may give that a try.
Yeah. They are mostly images of politicians and officials from the
archives of a freelance news photographer who worked in DC in the late 1800’s
/ early 1900’s. I didn’t think anyone would be interested in them.
:-)
Actually, they’re mostly water damaged x-rays that are fused together in
blocks of gunk.
Thanks again for the suggestion.
Bill
Sent from my iPhone
> > On Apr 26, 2019, at 2:25 AM, `Richard Knoppow
<dickburk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx mailto:dickburk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx ;> wrote:
Well, if you really want to do this try bleach. It will usually
remove the emulsion immediately. Don't know where to go from there.
Are these the rare historical photos of the last century?
> > > On 4/25/2019 9:25 PM, Bill Riley wrote:
I have a substantial amount of processed B&W negatives thatRichard Knoppow
will eventually be disposed. I would like to remove the emulsion in
batches and recover the siver before I get rid of the base. Does anyone
have any suggestions on emulsion removal in bulk from film?
Thank you... Bill
> > --
dickburk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx mailto:dickburk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
WB6KBL
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