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THE PHOTOGRAPHIC NEWS. Dec. 10, 1858, p.164
A Catechism of Photography.
WAXED PAPER PROCESS --(continued.)
Q. What is the chief advantage gained by the employment of waxed
paper in photographic operations?
A. The chief advantage of the waxed paper is, that it will keep
well in hot weather. It has been urged as an objection to the paper
process that the paper will not keep a sufficient time after
excitation to answer the purpose of travellers, who are compelled to
carry about with them a portable tent, and all the necessary
apparatus for manipulation. Such difficulties are immediately
overcome by the use of the waxed paper process.
Q. Are there not a variety of methods employed by photographers
in the application of the waxed paper process?
A. There are several different plans all founded on the mine
principles, as in most other branches of photography.
Q. Describe another process from that which has already been
stated; what is the first thing to be done?
A. In proceeding to detail another process the first operation is
to wax the paper on a sheet of heated iron, and to be careful that
the coating of wax is even and regular.
Q. What is the second?
A. The second part of the operation is to immerse the waxed paper
in a bath of iodide of potassium.
Q. How long should the paper be immersed?
A. From half-an-hour to two hours.
Q. How is the solution to be composed?
A. To a quantity of boiled whey is added iodide of potassium, 4
drachms; bromide of potassium, 60 grains; sugar of milk, 5 drachms.
When the paper is removed from the bath, it is dried between two
sheets of blotting paper.
Q. What is the third operation?
A. Sensitising in a bath of aceto-nitrate of silver, composed of
nitrate of silver, crystallised acetic acid, and pure water. The
paper so floated in the bath for one or two minutes, washed in
distilled water, dried between flat surfaces, and exposed in the
camera.
Q. What is the fourth operation?
A. That of the development of the negative proof, which is done
by immersing it in a solution of gallic acid; after which it is
washed several times in pure water.
Q. What is the fifth operation?
A. Fixing the proof. This is accomplished by immersing it
in a solution of hyposulphite of soda, washing it again in pure
water, and then drying it by the fire.
M. GEOFFROY'S PLAN.
Q. What is the process adopted by M. Geoffroy?
A. In his experiments on the waxed paper process M.
Geoffroy hit upon a new and more expeditious mode of conducting the
operation; it is called the ceroleine process.
Q. How is the operation conducted?
A. In the first place M. Geoffroy places five hundred
grammes (about eighteen ounces) of yellow or white wax in one litre
(about a quart) of alcohol of commercial strength in a glass retort,
and boils the alcohol until the wax is completely dissolved; having
previously attached a receiver to the retort to collect all the
products of the distillation, he then pours the still fluid mixture
into a glass vessel, and as it cools, the myricine and cerine
solidify, while the ceroleine remains in the alcoholic solution;
this liquid is separated by straining it through fine linen; and by
a final operation it is filtered through paper in a glass funnel.
This mixture, kept in a stoppered bottle, may be used when
required.
Q. How does M. Geoffroy continue his process?
A. He dissolves five drachms of iodide of ammonium (or
potassium) in five ounces of alcohol, together with fifteen grains
of fluoride of potassium or ammonium. Taking a capsule he pours drop
by drop upon fifteen grains of iodide of silver as much of a
solution of cyanide of potassium as is required to dissolve it. This
dissolved iodide of silver he proceeds to mix with the former
solution, shaking it briskly. There remains at the bottom of the
bottle a thick deposit of all the above salts, which serve to
saturate the alcohol with which that already saturated is
successively replaced.'
Q. Having prepared these solutions, how does M. Geoffroy
proceed?
A. These two bottles being ready, when about to prepare
negatives he takes about six ounces of solution No. 1, of ceroleine
and alcohol, and mixes it with five drachms of solution No. 2.
Filtering the mixture with care so as to avoid crystals, which spot
the paper, he makes a bath in a porcelain dish in which he immerses
the paper five or six pieces at a time, continuing to do so until
the solution is exhausted. After being taken, out, suspended on a
hook, and dried, these papers, which are of a very uniform rosy
tint, are covered up from dust and kept dry. They are sensitised by
nitrate of silver. The development of the image by gallic acid, and
the fixing the proof by the application of hyposulphite of soda, are
accomplished by the ordinary method, generally following that of
LeGrey, to which M. Geoffroy adds fifteen or thirty grains of
camphorated spirits of wine to one quart of a solution of gallic
acid.
Q. What are the peculiar advantages of the plan adopted by
M. Geoffroy?
A. Time process according to the formula of M. LeGrey is
slow and tedious when compared with that of Geoffroy; and very great
care is necessary both in the selection and application of the
materials. By Geoffroy's plan the iodising and waxing of the paper
are effected in one simple and rapid operation; the absorption is,
as may be supposed, very uniform and complete, from the facility
with which alcohol penetrates, and that granular appearance which is
so objectionable in ordinary waxed processes is avoided, owing to
the properties of the ceroleine.
Q.. Is the solution of ceroleine in alcohol easily made?
A. It is, and at a cheap rate; and the residue of stearine
and myricine may be employed with success for waxing fixed
proofs.
Q. Are negative pictures taken by this process equal in every
respect to those taken by the process of LeGrey?
. For the transparency of the proofs, the intensity of
the blacks, or the clearness of the whites and half-tints, they are
equal if not superior to those taken by any other process.
(To be continued.)
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