Would 7 year old Kodak Elite paper be any good, it it wasn't frozen?
It was stored in a basement, at slightly lower than room temperature.
Vick
Would 7 year old Kodak Elite paper be any good, it it wasn't frozen?
It was stored in a basement, at slightly lower than room temperature.
Vick
I doubt it. Back when I used Elite it was prone to severe fogging from storage if it wasn't frozen or, at the very least, refrigerated. As I recall, the paper went bad after about a year or so in normal room temp.
Cut off a section and stick in the developer and see what happens. Then you will know for sure.
I bought some that was older that 7 yrs and it was fine, it was not stored in cold at all. If the price is low enough it could be a good deal, or if it is for free grab it and make a few prints.
Elite has been gone for more than seven years. Think 1986-2002. Still worth a try if it's cheap enough.
My experience was that this paper is very prone to fogging if outdated and only stored in a "cool place" as opposed to an actual freezer. I did buy several boxes of it that were 2 or 3 years out of date and it was too badly fogged to use.
I did a lot of photoraphy in the 1970's, and then quit for about 10-15 years while my kids were growing up. When I went back to it all of my old Kodak paper was fine, I didn't find any spoiled.
If this paper is good I would recommend Lith printing as Elite is a brilliant lith paper.
A slight fog will not be a problem for lith.
Any paper that I suspect that may have passed its useful life gets tested in developer without exposure. If its good it should remain paper white. If it fogs up (and it usually happens within the first minute) then it gets retired or becomes reassigned as focusing sheets.
I thought everybody tested suspect paper this way.
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