On May 24, 2005, at 11:36, Justin F. Knotzke wrote: > The paper is yellow on the emulsion side. It's yellow mostly at the > very, very edges of the print. Sometimes it goes further in. From what > I can tell, it isn't yellow anywhere, where the image was exposed on > the paper. > > This is why I suspect the problem might be from turning the lights > on too early and not having used stop bath. If the image had already > been burned into the paper, no chance for yellowing.. But that's a > wild guess on my part. I have had paper that yellowed slightly in the edges when other sheets from that same session did not; I'm pretty sure it was because I wasn't careful enough about stray light sources (it's a royal pain to fully black out my kitchen and I thought it was okay...). So I could believe that. Graham -- Attached file included as plaintext by Ecartis -- -- File: PGP.sig -- Desc: This is a digitally signed message part -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.2.4 (Darwin) iD8DBQFCk9pp2kJk3FmxWkQRAkQDAKCCrH9DoKAeBLYCHwz8BCX1QK5AZQCeNa9B aj449z5oQYu3S9psNDdQoSw= =vIBg -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- ============================================================================================================= To unsubscribe from this list, go to www.freelists.org and logon to your account (the same e-mail address and password you set-up when you subscribed,) and unsubscribe from there.