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THE PHOTOGRAPHIC NEWS. Oct. 8, 1858, p.59
ANSWERS TO MINOR QUERIES.
GOLD-COLOURED STAINS ON ALBUMENISED POSITIVE PRINTS.--CHLORIDES FOR
PRINTING ON PLAIN PAPER.
Tewkesbury asks the cause of--First, long yellow metallic
lines, and circles of the same colour, which are So frequently to be
met with on removing the print from the printing frame, and which
are still apparent after toning and washing. Canson's, and Papier
Rive, are both affected with them, and Tewkesbury hardly ever gets a
print faultless in this respect. Secondly, which chlorides are best
adapted for preparing plain paper--chloride of ammonium, barium, or
sodium?--1. The stains referred to are frequently met with in
positives on albumenised paper. A little care in attending to the
following points will obviate them. Use quite fresh eggs, and take
care that the prepared albumen does not contain any opaque stringy
particles suspended in it. The paper must also be lowered on to the
surface by means of a steady, continuous movement. Any stoppages in
this operation will produce bronzed lines across the paper.
Carefully examine the surface of the albumen in the bath after each
sheet has been removed from it, and if any scum appears on the
surface of the liquid, remove it by drawing a piece of paper gently
over the surface, before laying down the next sheet. Be careful also
that the quantity of albumen in the bath be sufficient to prevent
the sheet from touching the bottom. 2. It matters little what
chloride be employed, provided the proportion be such that the bath
contains the proper quantity of chlorine. The chemical reaction
which takes place between the chloride used in the first preparation
of the paper, and the nitrate of silver used in rendering it
sensitive, is to produce a chloride of silver in the pores of
the paper, which is the real photographic agent, and a nitrate of
whatever base has been used in the first bath, be it ammonium,
barium, or sodium. This nitrate is perfectly soluble in water, and
consequently dissolves out into the silver bath whilst the sheet is
being made sensitive, and we do not believe it has the slightest
direct influence on the result. It may possibly slightly influence
the picture in an indirect way, owing to the accumulation of the
foreign nitrate in the silver bath which might thus, in the case of
nitrate of soda, for instance tend to give a deliquescent film on
the sensitive paper. Or from the chemical affinities of the base in
question,--thus chloride of barium as a salting bath would tend to
convert any sulphates in the paper to the state of sulphate of
baryta, which is, as far as present experience shows us, perfectly
harmless in a photographic point of view.
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