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Topic: Fire Damaged Photographs
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Randy Stankey
Film God
Posts: 6539
From: Erie, Pennsylvania
Registered: Jun 99
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posted 12-10-2009 08:29 PM
The apartment where my brother lives (or used to live) burned down last Sunday. The place is a total loss.
http://yourerie.com/content/fulltext/?cid=89562
That's my brother, Ryan, in the interview. He lived on the second floor, caddy-corner across the hall from the apartment that was the origin of the fire. His apartment is a virtual 100% loss.
Yesterday, the fire marshal let us into the apartment to salvage what we could. We didn't get much. There were a few books, some small items. That was just about it.
On a small stroke of luck, I ripped the back off a chest of drawers in his bedroom and pulled out his scrapbook and about a dozen envelopes full of family photographs. Surprisingly few of them were damaged beyond recognition. Many of them have 1 to 2 millimeters of charring around the edges which could be carefully cut off. There were several that didn't seem to be damaged at all.
Quite a few of them are dirty and wet. Many of the negatives survived without apparent damage upon visual inspection. A lot of things are stuck together.
I'm just wondering what's the best course of action.
Here's my plan:
1) Sort out all the stuff that's too far gone then find the stuff that's damaged but possibly salvageable. Finally pull out all the stuff that's still good.
2) Separate out all the negatives and carefully set them aside.
3) Try to match up the "gone" prints up with a negative. IF the negative is salvageable, use it to reprint.
There aren't very many "valuable" photos in the bunch so most of them could be just cleaned up, packed away then stored again. We originally thought they would be a total loss so anything we gain out of this is a bonus.
What do you think would be the best method of cleaning up old photos and negatives damaged by fire?
Could I use a clean developing tray filled with a solution of distilled water and Kodak Photo-Flo then carefully rewash them, in just like the way they were washed when they were originally made.
I do know how to develop and print B/W film by hand and I have used automated machines to create color prints.
What do you think is the best course of action?
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