It's interesting but gelatine doesn't melt in the
heat. It just dries out. Think of "Jello" right out of
the box. Do a google about the history of "JELLO", you
may not want to know where it comes from.
In the theater, the colored filters that are put over
lights are called "gels" for that reason.
"Gelatine" from animal and seaweed sources is a very
ancient product. It is used today in many food abd
cosmetic products.
Myc
--- lists <
stuart.winsor.lists@...> wrote:
> In article <e600d0+uluc@...>,
> kilocycles <kilocycles@...> wrote:
>
> > Just speculation at this point, hardly even a
> hypothesis. Therefore,
> > I think I'll charge forward and laser print some
> old fashioned
> > photographic paper tomorrow and see what happens.
>
> Errm, isn't photographic emulsion based on Gelatine?
> Do you not think it
> might melt in the heat?
>
>
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