Subject: Reddish photo id
Here are some further details about our reddish mystery photo for all those kind people offering assistance. There are no obvious signs of silver deterioration. I don't see a baryta layer, and since the edges have been trimmed, it should be easy to spot. I have compared it to our old sample book "32 Varieties of Autotype Pigment Papers" (Carbon Prints), and the surface does look similar; small flecks are even apparent, which could be undispersed pigment. I initially didn't think it was a carbon print because there is no apparent surface relief or crazing in the binder, and there are two colours. The image areas are black and the highlights are the brilliant "safety -vest" orange-red, although the image is warm, as though it is also covered with orange gelatin. Now, my suspicions are that it is a carbon print, and that the black image was printed first and overlaid with a continuous layer of orange-pigmented gelatin, which would explain the absence of relief. Quite the strange effect, especially in a portrait, but that's art. My only remaining confusion is that I expected my spot test on the edge to swell if the binder is gelatin. Perhaps it has been so hardened during processing that swelling is not noticeable. Sue Bigelow City of Vancouver Archives *** Conservation DistList Instance 5:24 Distributed: Sunday, October 20, 1991 Message Id: cdl-5-24-005 ***Received on Thursday, 17 October, 1991