Subject: Deterioration of photographic negatives
Juliette Baxter <jbaxter [at] northamptonshire__gov__uk> writes >We have a large collection of cellulosic photographic negatives from >a construction company (dates not known but likely to be 1930s >onwards). Sections of the collection are showing signs of >deterioration--distortion, bubbling of the emulsion, adhering to >glassine sleeves. ... Discussion continues on this list regarding cold storage of older negatives. My 40,000 negatives run from 1936 to 1973, and are all 4x5 sheet film, shot by a single photographer. However, from destructive testing (that is a fancy term for selecting some marginal negatives, clipping off corners from each, and burning them to see which are nitrate) it was clear that the photographer mixed nitrate and acetate within the same years; there is no clear dividing line. Mark McCormick-Goodheart generously provided me with a simple storage solution (big freezer; all negatives sleeved in groups of 12; sleeves put in the usual boxes; boxes triple-bagged; warming negatives in a picnic cooler to eliminate thermal shock. But it also became clear over time (as he predicted) that the 3% (?) of the negatives that were acetate (not nitrate) did not adapt well to freezing and warming, and over time--perhaps after the first cycle--the base and emulsion of many of the acetates separated, or separated far more than they were already. So, without resources to do a neg-by-neg examination and sequestration, we have just accepted those as a "sacrificial layer". We can always send out individual negs to have the emulsion refloated and flattened, if necessary. In 15 years it has not been. Christopher Gray *** Conservation DistList Instance 21:29 Distributed: Sunday, November 4, 2007 Message Id: cdl-21-29-004 ***Received on Friday, 26 October, 2007