Subject: Photo identification
Sue Bigelow queried a photographic process that "has a brilliant reddish- orange cast, as through the gelatin layer has been dyed this unnatural colour." Michael McCormick suggested the photograph may have been treated with Berg Copper Toner. I may have missed some other details in Bigelow's original note, but if the photograph is a print, shows significant mirroring, and the image appears to be fading it's highly likely that the print is an untoned printing out proof print (e.g., Kodak's Studio Proof). If the image is a studio portrait, I'd say the likelihood of being that process is very high. Left untreated, the studio proofs will continue to deteriorate as the silver will develop out physically over time, resulting in a uniform coppery tone image density. I don't know about trying to fix and tone the image at this point; I'd make a good copy negative and leave it at that. -- Richard Pearce-Moses, Curator of Photographs Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona 85287-1006 (602) 965-9276 *** Conservation DistList Instance 5:23 Distributed: Saturday, October 12, 1991 Message Id: cdl-5-23-001 ***Received on Monday, 7 October, 1991