BetterSense
Member
I like to use photo paper in ULF cameras. It's cheap and since it's so slow, it facilitates long exposures I'm doing for a project. The only problem is it's not panchromatic. Or even ortho.
Color paper is obviously panchromatic. I'm not interested in color information, but if I used color paper in-camera, what would I need to develop it in such that I could rephotograph it with pan film? I realize this sounds silly, but the ultra-large format is important for image geometry. Color paper might be an economical way to get cheap, slow, panchromatic "film".
What happens if you just develop color paper in b&w developer? I have a feeling there's not enough silver to develop a decent b&w image. There's no way I'm doing 100F development. I assume if I need color developer to develop dye. Can I put something in b&w developer that will develop the dye?
Color paper is obviously panchromatic. I'm not interested in color information, but if I used color paper in-camera, what would I need to develop it in such that I could rephotograph it with pan film? I realize this sounds silly, but the ultra-large format is important for image geometry. Color paper might be an economical way to get cheap, slow, panchromatic "film".
What happens if you just develop color paper in b&w developer? I have a feeling there's not enough silver to develop a decent b&w image. There's no way I'm doing 100F development. I assume if I need color developer to develop dye. Can I put something in b&w developer that will develop the dye?