Subject: Nitrate negatives
Since my comments appeared in Conservation DistList Instance 12:27 regarding the possible cause of higher mirroring on nitrate negatives around the watermark, a number of people contacted me about the possibility of the problem being chemical watermarking. I have to admit that no one really believed that Light Impressions would allow chemical watermarking to be used with their "archival" papers, but it was a possibility. I have since contacted Dennis Inch at LI to check on their specifications and he has assured me that they use mechanical watermarking for just that reason. They had decided to use the watermark to distinguish the "buffered" version from the "unbuffered" several years ago. It was possible to print on paper enclosures to indicate which type of paper was used, but not for interleaving papers. I've worked with Dennis for a number of years and I know that he knows the materials (and production of them) from end to end. It is interesting that this phenomenon has not been observed in other collections, although it should be very slow when the negatives are stored under good conditions. My recommendation for people putting negatives into cold storage is to package and store immediately. In theory, the magnitude of the problem will depend on the condition of the negative. As with acetate base, there tends to be a fairly long induction period with nitrate followed by accelerating deterioration. Douglas Nishimura Image Permanence Institute *** Conservation DistList Instance 12:38 Distributed: Thursday, October 22, 1998 Message Id: cdl-12-38-002 ***Received on Tuesday, 20 October, 1998