Subject: Contact print papers
For Jim Cartwright, I was sure someone would write in about chloride papers, but I guess no one did (unless I missed it.) Chloride refers to the halide salt of silver used in the light sensitive product. The halide used has a strong affect on the light sensitivity of the material. Silver Fluoride would never be used due to it's relatively high solubility in water and also because it would be painfully slow. Silver chloride is the slowest halide salt used in photography. This is one reason why historic printing-out papers (all chloride papers) had to be exposed for minutes to hours to get an image. However, chloride papers are slow enough (even though you don't print-out the image anymore) that they are good for contact printing. Bromide papers and mixed "chloro-bromide" papers are the most popular papers for making enlargements. Finally iodides or mixtures of iodides and bromide are used for camera films. (It would be impractical to make an enlarging paper that used exposures of 1/100 or 1/1000 sec under the enlarger.) The other influence of halide source is the ease with which it can be fixed. Silver iodide is the least soluble and hardest to fix out, while silver chloride is very easily fixed. I have never seen anyone select a halide based on solubility, however. *** Conservation DistList Instance 5:18 Distributed: Wednesday, September 4, 1991 Message Id: cdl-5-18-005 ***Received on Wednesday, 4 September, 1991