I'm maintaining my silver nitrate bath for wet plate collodion and have read that some practitioners, like Quinn Jacobson, use baking soda (sodium bicarbonate) or ammonium hydroxide during cleaning. I understand that the standard method involves UV sunning and filtering, but I'm curious about the specific role these chemicals play in maintenance:
I’m hoping to deepen my understanding before experimenting with these methods, so any insights or references would be greatly appreciated!
I really appreciate any help you can provide.
- What exactly does baking soda do in the silver bath? Does it help precipitate iodides or bromides by changing the pH?
- How does ammonium hydroxide compare? What role does it play in maintaining the bath?
- What are the advantages of using these chemicals over just sunning and filtering?
- In my experience, I have used both baking soda and ammonium hydroxide for heavy maintenance. However, baking soda creates many precipitates, while ammonium hydroxide seems easier and results in less silver wastage. What’s your opinion on this?
I’m hoping to deepen my understanding before experimenting with these methods, so any insights or references would be greatly appreciated!
I really appreciate any help you can provide.