Subject: Pink fingerprints on photographic print
I have seen a few pink fingerprints on B&W prints before, but I've never had to define the source. Most of the folks I have talked with have only seen a few, or no, pink fingerprints on B&W prints. Most of the fingerprints I have seen are in a silvered-out deposits, possibly a negative fingerprint where the oils prevented silvering-out locally. The print under examination is a non-Kodak fiber-based paper with neutral gray tones, made in 2001. While magenta (pink) fingerprints on chromogenic prints (loss of cyan and yellow dyes) is common, this print is a B&W image. Does anyone have something to add to the following information? In the article: Topics In Photographic Preservation, Vol. 5, 1993, pp 8-13: Hendriks and Krall, "Fingerprints on Photographs," the source of classic yellow to white fingerprints on B&W prints are defined. Hendriks and Krall say the NaCl/KCl in the fingerprints produces bleaching of the image, often with yellow present. They say the yellow is due to colloidal silver, which is yellow. My comment is: colloidal silver is finely divided silver particles, for the particle sizes found in B&W prints an negatives, this is yellow. The pink color could be a slightly larger AgCl, or Ag2S, colloides on the image silver. Red light has a large wavelength than yellow. Particle size interference with white light is one of the probable sources of the color manifested due to particle size. Hendriks and Krall say developer-based fingerprints show darker fingerprints, while fixer-based fingerprints shows yellow silver sulfide. I have produced a pink discoloration in my white lead discoloration experiments many years ago. I noticed then that silver tarnish and white lead discoloration show similar color progressions. The pink observed was due to colloidal deposits of sulfide (from H2S, hydrogen sulfide gas) on the white lead substrate. Normally, the discoloration would be red, but a thin deposit was pink. The tonal range went from: yellow, red, brown, warm black to cool black with tinges of blue. The first stage, yellow, was often fleeting and temporary. Is there some non-RC type B&W fiber paper used by commercial photographers in 2000-2002 that would be markedly different from those in the past, i.e., smaller silver particle size? Tim Vitale Paper, Photographs and Electronic Media Conservator Digital Imaging and Facsimiles Still Film Migration to Digital Preservation and Imaging Consulting Preservation Associates 1500 Park Ave Suite 132 Emeryville, CA 94608 510-594-8277 *** Conservation DistList Instance 19:9 Distributed: Friday, August 12, 2005 Message Id: cdl-19-9-016 ***Received on Thursday, 21 July, 2005