richard ide
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Paul Gilman's method was presented at the ICIS meeting in 2006 and is published in their journal. He showed real photographs which were projected transparencies. Kodak never investigated this process and little is known about the mechanism. A long thread is published here about it. Kodak rejected all solicitations to continue this work or to produce a trial run. So, the matter is dropped. AFAIK, there is a patent on this as well.
Grant Haist moved on from monobath processes himself to develop "Bimat" used in space photography, and also to develop several thermally processed materials. He taught me how to coat them and I produced several examples myself using his method and similar methods. They produced negative images of normal speed though.
PE
I just read through the CIS 2006 thread you posted, and I have to agree with r-s. At least from your description of the way things were handled with it. The market 'research' was really poor/next to non-existent.
(there was a url link here which no longer exists)
^--- this last one has example image from the film at ISO 12000 and 24000
years ago i read ( here ? ) that you could boos film speed
by fuming the film over ammonia or peroxide (?) or something simple and "household"
it has nothing do do with monobaths ... and might work with paper as well as film ...
any idea what this is i am talking about ?
thanks
john
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