David Jones
Member
- Joined
- Sep 29, 2009
- Messages
- 66
- Format
- 35mm
Does the Durst style of anti newton glass for the neg carrier really spoil the image quality or is it a myth?
Thanks
Dave
Thanks
Dave
BTW: my remarks were with respect to projection printing with diffuse light. Those people using condenser and point source enlargers may have a different experience with double or single AN glass.
My results, by the way, were with the standard Durst condensers.
Does the Durst style of anti newton glass for the neg carrier really spoil the image quality or is it a myth?
Thanks
Dave
AN glass goes only on top side. Bottom is clear or no glass. All my Leica enlargers have AN top and I can not see a difference if I print with a glassless except for corners going out of focus because the neg is not flat.
Plain glass on the bottom does not make a difference.
Now 4x5 is even less magnification so there is no chance of seeing anything. My 4x5 carrieres are AN top only, plain glass bottom, or glassless.
NEVER use AN on the bottom. Guaranteed you will see it big time.
Except that Howard Bond used AN glass for both the bottom and top glass plates in his enlarger, since some of the newer films have very shiny emulations, which can lead to Newton's rings. He has fairly high standards for image sharpnessThat said, AN glass varies in quality, and large enlargements are more likely to show up issues than small ones.
It's counter-intuitive, but bottom AN glass, at least Durst AN glass in a condenser enlarger, will have no visible effect an any enlargement and is, in my experience a necessity for TMX. As I said before, this is something I extensively tested.
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If you live in a climate where you're likely to have Newtons Rings - then you don't have much choice - either get some AN Glass or give up printing for those months when you are likely to encounter the problem.
What is a climate likely to induce newton rings please? I have not read this in my research to date, regards
Cool and damp/wet ambient conditions
The UK and Ireland are great places to get Newtons Rings, particularly in the Winter months
If you don't live in such Climatic conditions (a cool temperate ambient close to an ocean with predominantly on-shore winds that have travelled extensively over water) then you would be understandably (and luckily) unaware of the problem
I would presume Norway, Seattle and Vancouver would be similarly affected.
Martin![]()
For 35mm and even MF, are you not better of leaving the bottom glass out altogether?
Why glass in the first place, with smaller formats? There seems to be plenty of dof on the enlarger at f/8 or so with smaller formats, and 4x5 seems to stay perfectly flat under its own stiffness. Are you all making big prints that necessitate large apertures or glass to prevent the negative from warping?
Why is it that I can see sharp grain, then? If I can see sharp grain all across the print, then how could it be any sharper?
A truly sharp print only comes from a negative that is sandwiched between glass. Depth of focus is not enough to cover negative curl, sagging and heat popping sufficiently. This is most important for smaller formats. For example, a 35mm negative setup to make an 8x10 print at f/8 has a DoF of just 0.4 mm!
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