Hi Katherine!

It's certainly better if they don't freeze, to say the least!  I've never 
actually had film chemicals freeze, but I have noticed that solutions that are 
concentrated, like black and white reversal clearing bath, tend to fall out of 
solution when stored at 50°F, and that what falls out does not redissolve even 
on warming.  I would guess that freezing would cause all kinds of precipitation 
that would be hard to reverse, and that this would be trouble enough even aside 
from the possibility that freezing would harm any of the solutes themselves.

I think letting them freeze is a bad idea.  If you can bring them in, do!  A 
stable temperature is a good idea.

On Feb 10, 2016, at 3:45 PM, Katherine Bauer <[email protected]> wrote:

> 
> Hi Frameworks,
> I have an enclosed porch that I wanted to turn into a dark room, it is sort 
> of insulated, but it is still cold, Im in upstate NY. I haven't put a 
> thermometer out there, but we have some nights coming up that might be in the 
> tens if not single digits coming up. What happens if chemicals freeze? Like, 
> I have a liquid E6 kit and C14 kits etc.that I would like to keep on the 
> porch. Can I store them out there, or is it better not to because 
> temperatures at night can drop? Is it better if the temperature is more 
> stable anyway? Like an inside closet? 
> Thanks! 
> 
> 
> 
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