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Bromide

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Bromide paper
Printing paper mostly with silver bromide emulsion Most widespread type of photographic printing paper. It is coated with an emulsion of silver bromide to replicate black & white images.
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Bromide paper
Photographic printing paper which is coated with a light sensitive emulsion of silver bromide, to reproduce black and white images.
(see: Emulsion, Fibre (FB) and RC paper) ...

Bromide paper. Light-sensitive photographic paper for enlarging or contact printing. Carries a predominantly silver bromide emulsion. Must be handled in appropriate (usually amber or orange) safe lighting.

-Bromide paper - most common type of photographic printing paper. It is coated with an emulsion of silver bromide to reproduce black & white images.

[edit] Bromide papers
Papers with pure silver bromide emulsions are sensitive and produce neutral black or 'cold' blue-black image tones.[2]
[edit] Contrast control ...

silver bromide
a pale yellow crystalline compound that turns black on exposure to light used as light sensitive component in photographic film.
silver chloride
a white granular powder that turns dark on exposure to light.

-Chlorobromide paper - photographic paper coated with an emulsion made up of both silver chloride and silver bromide. Used for producing enlargements with a warm, slightly brownish-black image, especially if processed in a warm tone developer.

If a film is placed in a developer and allowed to develop without movement, the chemical action soon slows down because the developing agent in contact with the surface of the emulsion becomes exhausted and bromide (a restrainer) is released as a ...

One day I made up a developer solution containing metol, sulfite, carbonate, and bromide, and bubbled air through it for several hours to oxidize a large part of the metol.

The emulsion consists of gelatin containing light sensitive silver halide crystals such as silver bromide and silver chloride. In practice the film will consist of many other layers.

Bromoil printing has the advantage that images are created from bromide enlargements - so 5x4 inch or 8x10 inch internegatives are not required.

The light-sensitive compounds can be silver chloride or silver bromide or a mixture of these.

A chemical compound of silver (usually silver bromide, silver chloride and silver iodide) used as the light-sensitive constituent (emulsion) in films.

I think a beautiful silver bromide print is something that is hard to beat. - I did earn a living at it for 30 years - but I now "print" better in the light with my Mac, Photoshop and my Canon iPF5000 printer than ever I did in the dark.

The silver at this point is silver bromide. When light hits it, it forms a latent image, which is made visible and intensified during the development process.

These halides are produced through reactions with bromine (silver bromide - AgBr), iodine salts (silver Iodide - AgI) or in the presence of chloride ions (silver chloride - AgCl).

See also: Photograph, Image, Film, Photography, Silver