You can still buy PEC-12, a liquid film cleaner, from most camera stores and 
numerous web sources. Not as good as the old stuff, which contained a chemical 
that's now banned, but it does a decent job.
Paul via phone



Paul via phone
> On Mar 24, 2016, at 4:41 AM, Malcolm Smith <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> I've just been given 3 x 100 boxes of slides in sealed trays which date back
> to the 1970s. They have been poorly stored and some of the slides (about
> half) have some measure of mould damage or other damage. They are mostly of
> family and local area of the period and are time worthy for me to try and
> repair as best as possible.
> 
> Some of them are clear of overall mould but spotted; these I can scan and
> repair in Lightroom or Elements. The others still have a mould growth over
> the entire film surface, and I want to clean them up before scanning and
> digital repair. The image behind nearly all of them is good enough to try
> and repair. In the days of local photography shops (happy days, the four
> local ones to me are all long closed) I believe there was a liquid film
> cleaner that could be bought, although I have no idea if it was up to this
> sort of job anyway. Is there anything I can acquire from a chemist, or some
> household cleaning product I could use, possibly diluted, that is gentle
> enough to remove the mould before drying and scanning?
> 
> Malcolm 
> 
> 
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