I just completely refurbed and refinished my 8X10 view camera and am curious as to what film other folks here would use for contact printing and enlarging. So far I have only did some old contact prints and scanned and printed digital wise. I plan on scanning and contact printing first and then building an 8X10 VC enlarger on a Beseler 45 chassis I have. My main interest at the moment is finding a real good film for contact printing to get the best results the easiest possible way. I have Tmax 100, TMY2 and TRI-X, but have thought that maybe Bergger Pancro 400 might just be the "cats meow" for contact printing. What do you think??
Shanghai GP3 is the only other stock that's price-comparable to Foma in that size, and I'd trust Foma's QC a bit further than I would Shanghai's.
I just completely refurbed and refinished my 8X10 view camera and am curious as to what film other folks here would use for contact printing and enlarging. So far I have only did some old contact prints and scanned and printed digital wise. I plan on scanning and contact printing first and then building an 8X10 VC enlarger on a Beseler 45 chassis I have. My main interest at the moment is finding a real good film for contact printing to get the best results the easiest possible way. I have Tmax 100, TMY2 and TRI-X, but have thought that maybe Bergger Pancro 400 might just be the "cats meow" for contact printing. What do you think??
John, I've been curious about contact printing from 8x10 for a while so I'll be interested in your findings.
I've recently tested Bergger Pancro in 35mm as I was fascinated by some examples I've seen online, and because there are a lot of urban myths circulating online about this film. I'm currently going through a few fresh rolls of the stuff and I'm finding it a fantastic film, very close to the advertised speed in the developer I've developed it in, very interesting grain and perfect QC. I made a thread about my impressions of it recently. I think it would look truly incredible in 8X10 and contact printed. I will absolutely jump on it when I find it in 120, even.
However - I've checked the online shop where I've bought my rolls and I couldn't find it in sheet format.
Why don't you go for Foma? I have seen in person some pretty incredible contact prints from 8X10 Foma 200. It works really well with Adox XT-3 which I know you use, and based on what I am told it's much less prone to defects in sheet format compared to its 120 counterpart.
As I said earlier: "Pancro 400 has been absent from the market for nearly five years now. If you can find inventory of it in 8x10, it WILL be old/outdated stock, for which you will still pay nearly $200 USD. I don't think it offers any advantages, really. And why start working with a film that hasn't been manufactured in half a decade?"
Whoa! Them's fightin words ... lolThe power of variable contrast lies in the ability to go up or down a grade which corresponds to N+1 or N-1 negative development changes in the old (obsolete?) Zone System.
You are right!Whoa! Them's fightin words ... lol
I've shot hundreds of 8x10s on TXP, TMX, TMY2, Efke IR820, and Fomapan 100, 200, 400 and they all deliver gorgeous contact prints.
One critical point for me is to calibrate my Exposure Index and Development protocols to deliver normal contrast and normal density negatives.
The second step is to print on variable contrast paper; not Azo, not POP, or anything that comes in one contrast only.
The power of variable contrast lies in the ability to go up or down a grade which corresponds to N+1 or N-1 negative development changes in the old (obsolete?) Zone System.
A contrast tweaked negative prints well only in one way. If you guess the tweak wrong the sheet is wasted. Disappointment gets expensive in 8x10.
Of course nine tenths of the challenge is to find visually attractive and evocative subject matter in good light. And the subject matter should be something that doesn't die, deteriorate, or run away inside ten minutes.
Here's a looker:
Twin Snow Gums, Grace
Gelatin-silver photograph on Arista Edu Ultra FB VC photographic paper, image area 19.7cm X 24.5cm, exposed in contact with a Fomapan 200 negative.
Camera was a Tachihara triple extension 8x10 field view camera with a Fujinon-W 300mm f5.6 lens.
The trees had grown in each others company for about 300 years but now one has died, one still flourishes; grace in life and death.
As I said earlier: "Pancro 400 has been absent from the market for nearly five years now. If you can find inventory of it in 8x10, it WILL be old/outdated stock, for which you will still pay nearly $200 USD. I don't think it offers any advantages, really. And why start working with a film that hasn't been manufactured in half a decade?"
It's very present in the market, as I've just purchased many rolls with 2026 and 2027 expiry from a mainstream online seller here in continental Europe.
What's your evidence that it hasn't been manufactured in a decade?
Yeah, Kodak films are expensive; but 8x10 really isn't a machine-gunner format anyway.
Huh, not a single Ilford recommendation? I would think that any of them would do well for contact printing in general.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?