Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/04/14

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Subject: Re: [Leica] negative intensification
From: Tina Manley <images@InfoAve.Net>
Date: Tue, 14 Apr 1998 12:49:29 -0400

At 10:48 AM 4/14/98 -0400, you wrote:
>HELP! Sorry to yell, but I have a big problem. I developed about 12 rolls of
>Tri-x in divided D-76. The developer must have been too old and lost
activity.
>( haven't we all?) The negatives are quite thin and flat. My question is can
>they be intensified? I've never tried and don't know anything about the
>different processes, except for a little I got from some limited reading. Do
>intensifiers really work? Is the print quality affected? If anyone out there
>has any experience doing this, I would appreciate hearing from them. A number
>of these images are very important to me and I am willing to try anything.
TIA
>
>		Richard W
> 

Richard:

Kodak used to make a Chromium Intensifier which worked great, but I believe
it was discontinued because of environmental problems.  If you want to make
your own the formula from "The Darkroom Cookbook" is:

Potassium dichromate, 10% solution  12.5 ml
Hydrocholoric Acid, concentrated           .3 ml
Water to make	                            100  ml

Negatives to be intensified should first be hardened either in the fixer or
as an after-treatment.  Immerse the negatives in the bath until bleached.
Wash negative until free from yellow stain, about 5 minutes, redevelop,
after exposure to daylight , with a normal developer (not fine-grain) until
the image has blackened completely.  Fix, wash, and dry.  If sufficient
intensification is not achieved the process may be repeated.  

Hope this helps!  Good luck - TIna
______________________________________________________________________

Tina Manley, ASMP
<http://www.photogs.com/manley/index.html>
<http://www.aperture-photo.com/site/reportage/manley/manleyframeset.html>
<http://www.onlineartistleague.com/manleyt/portfoli.htm>