I Need a Negative/Slide Cleaner

raid

Dad Photographer
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I used to have a Kodak fluid for cleaning negatives and slides. It would easily remove even sticky material from slides and negatives. Where can I get such a cleaner these days? What do you use to clean negatives if dirty with sticky material?


Raid
 
Patman and DCourter: Alcohol did not work for me. I tried today removing residue from a the glue of a transparent tape that somehow was stuck to a slide. Maybe the PEC-12 Photographic Emulsioin Cleaner will be better.
Thanks.

Raid
 
What if two negs or more are stuck together? What's the best way to unstick them without ruining their glossy coating?

And if I forced them apart, is there any way to salvage them, or are they ruined forever?
 
raid said:
Patman and DCourter: Alcohol did not work for me. I tried today removing residue from a the glue of a transparent tape that somehow was stuck to a slide. Maybe the PEC-12 Photographic Emulsioin Cleaner will be better.
Thanks.

I've had good luck with the following methods, kind of in the order of severity here:

1. Filtered H2O on a Q-tip.

2. 91% isopropyl alcohol (not the weaker rubbing alcohol). This seems to work on fingerprints, even those that have been on the negative for a long time.

3. Delta C-100 Total Emulsion Cleaner. I got this off the shelf at a local photo shop. I'm sure other similarly-named products are more or less the same as this. Too much of it and you get a whitish residue which comes off with H2O on a Q-tip. My guess is that this will dissolve tape goo. It has a very typical solvent smell.
 
DCourter said:
PEC-12 Photographic Emulsioin Cleaner works great and is available at any good photo supply store or on-line - B&H, Adorama etc.
I agree. I use it on some really bad cases, and it works well. You have to learn how to use it well; it's not a magic bullet all by itself.
 
raid said:
dmr: H2O=water. You don't mean a different product, do you?

Yes, H2O=water, aqua, clear wet stuff, dihydrogen monoxide, wawa. 🙂

More specifically I mean reasonably pure and clean water, such as the filtered bottled water out of the machine at work or that generic purified gallon jug water from the supermarket. I would think that's about the safest solvent there is to use on film.
 
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