A question that I would ask the OP is, how long have you had this plant. Nutrient deficiencies only show up over an extended period of time (and Paphs are particularly light feeders so can go for months with no fertilizer at all before showing any problem and even then, it would just be slower growth) If it is a relatively recent (less than a year) acquisition, I'd look at temperature. This type of Paph does like to be on the warmer side, so if it got a chill (or cold water in a leaf axil) this could be a result.
They are also very forgiving of water quality so pH problem (especially on the high side) is unlikely... The Huntington Botanic Garden in southern California gives their very large, world-class Paph collection well water of 300-800 parts per million TDS (it varies), pH around 8 or a bit higher - they found that the Paphs grow better with the "liquid rocks" than with pure water! (Phrags are different - they require fairly pure water, they get RO)
Last edited by Roberta; 02-26-2020 at 08:01 PM..
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