I've had a nagging question in the back of my mind for a while now, and after experimenting to work it out myself came up with more confusion. Thought I'd put it to APUG as Google has been no help either.
When one is printing with printing-out paper, like salt printing, the image appears immediately. There's no need to develop. When one prints with developing-out paper, the image is latent, and must be developed to be visible.
I've been looking at various emulsion recipes and noticed that they generally have bromide in them. A very simple one was basically bromide, silver and gelatin, and had fairly standard developing instructions with it.
So today I swapped out salt for bromide while contact printing and expected the image to be latent, but it wasn't! It was there as strong as if I'd used regular sodium chloride instead.
So... what exactly is it that causes the image to be latent in DOP? I'm really scratching my head over this one.
signed,
Confused.
When one is printing with printing-out paper, like salt printing, the image appears immediately. There's no need to develop. When one prints with developing-out paper, the image is latent, and must be developed to be visible.
I've been looking at various emulsion recipes and noticed that they generally have bromide in them. A very simple one was basically bromide, silver and gelatin, and had fairly standard developing instructions with it.
So today I swapped out salt for bromide while contact printing and expected the image to be latent, but it wasn't! It was there as strong as if I'd used regular sodium chloride instead.
So... what exactly is it that causes the image to be latent in DOP? I'm really scratching my head over this one.
signed,
Confused.