Fixer lifegreenspun.com : LUSENET : B&W Photo: Creativity, Etc. : One Thread |
I have been using black and white for some time. However although I have now got my darkroom technique to a strict system I still find the bottle life of fixers varies considerably - or is it me ? I only use fresh developer each time but I use a re-useable stop bath and a re-useable fixer.Sometimes my prints don't seem as crisp as they should be - I've checked the safelight - no leaks. How long does fixer last or should I use fesh each time ? Any suggestions please ?
-- Anthony Brookes (gdz00@dial.pipex.com), October 24, 1998
I'm assuming you're talking about print fixer and not film. I'm not sure spent fix will cause loss of crispness but more fogging and discoloration over time. A simple but effective experiment would be to have two trays at the time of printing; 1 with the suspect fixer and the other with fresh fix. Expose 2 identical prints and fix separately in the two fixers, then compare the prints. You should repeat this is a few times to help control for other variables. Never base any decision on one piece of data.
-- andy laycock (agl@intergate.bc.ca), October 25, 1998.
Another issue might be that you have a case of "fixer nerves" meaning that you are turning on the white light to soon after enterning the fix. The paper reguires AT LEAST 30-45 seconds with continuous agatating befor you turn on the light.
-- jim megargee (mvjim@interport.net), October 27, 1998.
This is a nifty product (by Edwal?) that no darkroom should be without. Comes in a small plastic bottle kinda like Visene and squirts out a single drop---which, when it hits exhausted fix, instantly forms a chalky, milky tell-tale precipitate. Highly recommended. I've been using it for years and it fixed my fix problem.
-- Standish Lawder (sdl@sni.net), February 13, 1999.
I agree with the foregoing speaker - I use a comparable product on the Dutch market. But I don't think your problem is caused by fixer. I would think of the paper, the developer and the combination. Do you use anti-fog (1H-Benzotriazole) in your developer? I've had this problem with 'uncrispyness' also but since I use AGFA MC Developer I have no complaints anymore, and I do not need anti-fog anymore. I store my papers at a cool and dry place.
-- Lot (lotw@wxs.nl), February 14, 1999.