F96.jpg
  • F96.jpg
  • F96_6a5af43e-a10f-46ea-a878-306f0e6daf1f.jpg
  • F96_98cdef56-44cb-4c21-ac03-b585a4b9f283.jpg
  •              

F96 B&W + Bleach-Bypass Rapid Fixer, Powder Concentrate

  • $7.99



Similar Products

                                                         

Product Details

The world’s only powder rapid fixer also happens to be the most potent. So potent in fact that you have to further dilute 1 liter of working solution to 2 liters in order to match liquid concentrate rapid fixers. We use the purest ammonium thiosulfate agents to fix your film and make it archival in record time. Just add water!

Reusable solution fixes 24+ rolls of B&W or color film and can be diluted to make 1-2 liters of working solution fixer for the traditional 2-bath B&W process or Bleach-Bypass color process.

The "Bleach-bypass" color process, also known as skip bleach or silver retention, is a process of skipping the step of bleaching during processing of color films. By doing this, silver is retained in the emulsion along with color dyes. The result is a black and white image over a color image. The images usually have reduced saturation along with increased contrast and graininess.

Motion Picture "Bleach-bypass" was first used in cinematography by Japanese filmmaker Hiroshi Inagaki in film Rickshaw Man (1957). Kazuo Miyagawa, as Daiei Film's cameraman, invented bleach-bypass for Inagaki's film, inspired by the color rendition in the original release of Moby-Dick (1956), printed using dye-transfer Technicolor, and was achieved through the use of an additional black and white overlay. Actually, this is a throwback to pre-1944 Technicolor, which incorporated a silver-containing "blank receiver". Despite this early foray into the technique, it remained overlooked for the most part until its use by Roger Deakins for 1984 (1984). The effect has subsequently become a regular development tool in labwork, and has remained in widespread use. Practitioners include cinematographers Rodrigo Prieto, Remi Adefarasin, Darius Khondji, Dariusz Wolski, Walter Carvalho, Oliver Stapleton, Newton Thomas Sigel, Park Gok-ji, Shane Hurlbut, Steven Soderbergh (as "Peter Andrews"), Tom Stern, Vittorio Storaro, and Janusz Kamiński (notably on Steven Spielberg's Saving Private Ryan and Minority Report.

T-grain films and bleach bypassed color film require Rapid Fixer (ammonium thio) to fully clear the color dyes. Standard cubic-grain films finish fixing in as little as 1-2 minutes! Washing of films is also exceedingly fast, due to the rapid absorption rates of ammonium thiosulfate in emulsions. 

  • 1 liter of working strength F96 Rapid Fixer solution fixes 24+ rolls of 135 or 120, or 100 4x5in sheets of black & white film. 1+1 paper dilution fixes 80 sheets of 8x10in resin coated (RC) prints, or 40 sheets of 8x10in fiber based (FB) prints.
  • Wash films in running water for 5–10 minutes at a temperature within 5°C (10°F) of the process temperature.
  • Film clearing time: In order to avoid the risk of insufficient fixing, film should remain in the fixer for twice the time it takes the emulsion to visibly clear. Used fixer should be discarded when film isn’t visibly clear in twice the time as with fresh fixer. The clearing time of a film and fixer combination can be found by the following method. Take a piece of scrap unprocessed film and place a drop of the working strength fixer on to part of the emulsion side. Time how long it takes until the emulsion under the drop is a clear spot, this should take between 15-60 seconds with traditional B&W films. The time it takes for the film to clear is the clearing time. The fixing time needed is double the clearing time.

Download F96 Rapid Fixer Safety Data Sheet

Photochemical Waste Management


We Also Recommend

image_64260ba9-5fc1-4fb9-aa2c-e52e564591e8.jpg


800Tungsten High Speed Color Negative Film, 35mm

rrp

MOD04259-Edit_c81b80d7-5f94-439d-814d-412501f2f6c6.jpg


Cs41 "Color Simplified" 2-Bath Kit

rrp rrp

Df96Monobath.jpg


Df96 “Developer&Fix” B&W Monobath

rrp rrp

MOD01347-Edit.jpg


800Tungsten High Speed Color Negative Film, 120

rrp

image_8878f877-fec1-491c-af4c-c4f4208cb727.jpg


50Daylight Fine Grain Color Negative Film, 35mm

rrp

MOD01388-Edit.jpg


BwXX Black and White Negative Film, 35mm

rrp
Expected arrival after Oct 25, 2024

MOD06156-Edit_6ea97ab8-0e62-4016-a0dd-2b09f0c036f0.jpg


400Dynamic Versatile Color Negative Film, 35mm

rrp

Portra40035pro_d0f8222b-80be-412c-92ab-cc1c2ee5d4c4.jpg


Portra 400 Color Negative Film, 35mm 36 exp. 5 pack

Sale price Save $5.30 rrp rrp $84.79

MOD01343-Edit.jpg


50Daylight Fine Grain Color Negative Film, 120

rrp

1441743754000_1148512_56b303f1-e886-4ce2-9762-96dfe6dbb919.jpg


°Cs Collapsible Air Reduction Accordion Storage Bottle

rrp rrp

MOD05942-Edit.jpg


400Dynamic Film Enamel Pin

rrp

TCS-1000_2.jpg


°Cs "Temperature Control System", TCS-1000 Immersion Circulator Thermostat For Mixing Chemistry and Precision Film Processing

rrp

MOD01339-Edit.jpg


BwXX Black and White Negative Film, 120

Sale price Save $2 rrp rrp $13.99

Kodak_8331506_120_Professional_Portra_400_742299_1bf1c4d0-ff18-4a84-87c2-07c3d401b3bb.jpg


Portra 400 Color Negative Film, 120 5 pack

Sale price
Expected arrival after Oct 14, 2024

Kodak-Portra-800-35mm_1024x1024_ca3aca42-eeaf-4b4d-88c7-06e4846c95f5.jpg


Portra 800 Color Negative Film, 35mm 36 exp.

Sale price Save $0.80 rrp rrp $18.79

9F046628-91A1-4B6F-9F36-6FD9F1C53077_03049299-b039-440f-9f92-5ddc0cce551d.jpg


HP5 Plus 400 High Speed Black and White Negative Film, 35mm

Sale price Save $0.50 rrp

MOD02613-Edit_2f052931-0c28-440b-ace4-e2db058451da.jpg


JOBO DUO Color + B&W Film Processing Kit for 35mm & 120

rrp
Expected arrival after Oct 25, 2024

MOD06177-Edit_82dad35f-1f99-4b35-9954-c96e5fff374a.jpg


400Dynamic Versatile Color Negative Film, 120

rrp

35mm Film Retriever


35mm Film Retriever

rrp

MOD05244-Edit.jpg


Cs6 "Creative Slide" DynamicChrome Kit (E-6)

rrp