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Arista.EDU Ultra 120 Film and gummed tape wrapper

BardParker

Member
Allowing Ads
Joined
Jan 22, 2012
Messages
100
Location
Tyler, Texas
Format
Multi Format
Maybe this is just me, but I have shot about 10 rolls of Arista.EDU Ultra film in 120 over the past few months. Every time I try to remove the gummed tape securing the paper backing to the roll, in order to load the film, it partially tears the black paper backing. This then leaves shreds of tiny black paper in my Mamiya 7 and Pentax 645N as the film is rolled onto the takeup spool. I have to be careful when loading and unloading to clean all this junk out. This doesn't seem to happen with other films: Kodak, Fuji, Ilford. Am I doing something wrong, or have other APUG members noticed these rolls are hard to open?

Regards,

Kent
 
Had the same experience. Don't peel it off. İ cut through the middle with my nail to leave the pieces stuck, glued and intact.
 
gets loose


I see the same thing. And, when the roll is done the tape is useless to secure the finished roll. It doesn't stick. I use a rubber band to keep the roll wrapped tight, and then put it in a black plastid can for safe keeping until ready to develop, so it doesn't get light leaks.

It seems like nice film, though. But, I do make an effort to keep it rolled up tight while handling it so I don't get light leaks.
 

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jstout, that is a nice picture, the film looks great. Question, is it softer than something from Kodak or Ilford? Another words, scratch easier? TY
 
Peel and stick


Don't lick the end tape. Peel off the little strips of pale yellow backing paper to reveal adhesive.
 
I didn't have too hard a time "cutting" through the tape with a thumbnail. My main complaint with this film is that it curls along it's length very badly once developed, therefore making it very difficult to load into my scanner's holder. It's okay film, but the curling problem is a showstopper.

Regards
 
jstout, that is a nice picture, the film looks great. Question, is it softer than something from Kodak or Ilford? Another words, scratch easier? TY

Thanks Fotch, for the nice compliment. I will defer to others here with infinitely more experience handling different films in varying conditions, on the issue of vulnerabity of the emulsion, as I am relatively new at developing. My process is to pre-rinse this film (and rinse between steps), use a Kodak hardening fixer, and I am very careful handling the film, and to date haven't noticed any glaring issues.
 
Beautiful image. I always was curious about this film and what it can produce. I'm digging the price too. Thanks for posting.

ToddB