BWVision
Qatar National Museum 2 - interior C-Type Print
Qatar National Museum 2 - interior C-Type Print
Couldn't load pickup availability
![Qatar National Museum 2 - interior C-Type Print](http://store.bwvision.com/cdn/shop/products/ee77c179-bc99-4f1e-b7c4-fdad4cadc071.jpg?v=1699826807&width=1445)
![Qatar National Museum 2 - interior C-Type Print](http://store.bwvision.com/cdn/shop/products/885f4728-42e7-41cc-99f5-a29aaad69756.jpg?v=1699826807&width=1445)
![Qatar National Museum 2 - interior C-Type Print](http://store.bwvision.com/cdn/shop/products/6cf6c1e9-ef77-42fc-b04e-4c0cecf95508.jpg?v=1699826807&width=1445)
What Is Silver Halide?
Silver halide is a chemical compound and has been used in photographic film and paper for hundreds of years. In fact, when it comes to producing high-quality photo prints, silver halide printing is the chef’s kiss of printing methods.
Also referred to as chromogenic prints, C-types, C-prints or C-type prints, silver halide prints are actually created by a chemical reaction. And while you won’t find us teaching science lessons any time soon, we do know a thing or two about this kind of chemistry…
Silver halide paper contains light-sensitive silver halide crystals and dye couplers suspended in layers of gelatin. When this paper (and the concoction inside it) is exposed to light, it triggers a chemical reaction, which then develops to form a full-colour image — all without a drop of ink in sight.
In a nutshell, silver halide prints are exposed using light instead of ink, digital files instead of film negatives and a printer instead of a darkroom.