Search
×
FR

Placeholder headline

This is just a placeholder headline

ISO/TR 42505:2026 Sharing economy — Shared manufacturing — Concepts and models

$

192

BUY NOW

Placeholder headline

This is just a placeholder headline

ISO 4306-1:2026 Cranes — Vocabulary — Part 1: General

$

436

BUY NOW

Placeholder headline

This is just a placeholder headline

ISO 21316:2026 Traditional Chinese medicine — Isatis indigotica root

$

192

BUY NOW

Placeholder headline

This is just a placeholder headline

TEMA 11th Edition – Book of Standards (Not for Resale)

$

0

BUY NOW

ISO 18929:2012

ISO 18929:2012 Imaging materials – Wet-processed silver-gelatin type black-and-white photographic reflection prints – Specifications for dark storage

CDN $260.00

SKU: 48833f74bdde Category:

Description

ISO 18929:2012 establishes the specifications for silver-gelatin photographic reflection prints intended for dark storage. It covers silver-gelatin print types of all weights.

ISO 18929:2012 applies to wet-processed black-and-white silver-gelatin photographic prints, including those that have been chemically treated (with a gold, selenium, sulfur, or other chemical treatment bath) to improve the permanence of the silver image. It also applies to silver-gelatin prints processed by a monobath, which includes thiosulfate as a fixing agent followed by a conventional wash.

Edition

2

Published Date

2012-03-30

Status

PUBLISHED

Pages

22

Language Detail Icon

English

Format Secure Icon

Secure PDF

Abstract

ISO 18929:2012 establishes the specifications for silver-gelatin photographic reflection prints intended for dark storage. It covers silver-gelatin print types of all weights.

ISO 18929:2012 applies to wet-processed black-and-white silver-gelatin photographic prints, including those that have been chemically treated (with a gold, selenium, sulfur, or other chemical treatment bath) to improve the permanence of the silver image. It also applies to silver-gelatin prints processed by a monobath, which includes thiosulfate as a fixing agent followed by a conventional wash.

Previous Editions

Can’t find what you are looking for?

Please contact us at: