"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
I must be doing something very wrong. The only time my screens are in a no-light environment is when stored in a screen rack with top, sides and a door to block the light during storage.I setup and affix my films to screens in normal florescent lights and that might take several minutes. After exposing, I simply carry the screen, again in florescent light, to the washout booth and start the rinse process. I don't race to the booth and I sure don't use a black garbage bag.Andy. I think this goes along with past posts about how fast room light affects emulsions, but I don't have any links.
Quote from: screenxpress on October 09, 2018, 05:11:24 PMI must be doing something very wrong. The only time my screens are in a no-light environment is when stored in a screen rack with top, sides and a door to block the light during storage.I setup and affix my films to screens in normal florescent lights and that might take several minutes. After exposing, I simply carry the screen, again in florescent light, to the washout booth and start the rinse process. I don't race to the booth and I sure don't use a black garbage bag.Andy. I think this goes along with past posts about how fast room light affects emulsions, but I don't have any links.Yep, Brad and I and maybe others as well mentioned that we all briefly handle our screens in normal light conditions with no ill effect. Folks erroring in favor of extra caution is understandable as they don't yet have any gauge on how much light is needed to screw it up.