Steve Goldstein
Subscriber
For a few years now I've been using Rosco R68 "Parry Sky Blue" and Rosco R389 "Chroma Green" filters above the negative for split printing. These are the filters Steve Sherman recommended to me several years ago. The #68 filter alone gave me almost exactly the same contrast as the Ilford #5 filter with slightly shorter exposure times as determined by enlarging a Stouffer step wedge.
A while back I was looking through the Rosco swatch book and noticed that the R68's transmission tail extended into the green above 520nm, where the low-contrast emulsion is sensitive. The R384 "Midnight Blue" filter had much less transmission in the green (and less transmission overall) so I ordered one to try someday. Well, someday came today - I had a negative in the enlarger that printed almost entirely with the R68 so I figured that would be as good a time to compare filters as any.
The R384 filter is definitely slower - I had to more than double the exposure on Ilford Multigrade Classic with my V54-equipped Zone VI cold light head - but the increase in contrast was significant and immediately obvious. And it's cheap, I think I paid $6.95 for a 20" x 24" sheet.
Edit: These plastic Rosco filters aren't optical quality, that's why they need to be used above the negative.
A while back I was looking through the Rosco swatch book and noticed that the R68's transmission tail extended into the green above 520nm, where the low-contrast emulsion is sensitive. The R384 "Midnight Blue" filter had much less transmission in the green (and less transmission overall) so I ordered one to try someday. Well, someday came today - I had a negative in the enlarger that printed almost entirely with the R68 so I figured that would be as good a time to compare filters as any.
The R384 filter is definitely slower - I had to more than double the exposure on Ilford Multigrade Classic with my V54-equipped Zone VI cold light head - but the increase in contrast was significant and immediately obvious. And it's cheap, I think I paid $6.95 for a 20" x 24" sheet.
Edit: These plastic Rosco filters aren't optical quality, that's why they need to be used above the negative.
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