mshchem
Subscriber
I'm curious about this. Seems to be very little interest. I have printed RA4 a lot in the past. I've been wondering is this still happening?
Great, please post your results. I'm thinking RA4, non-commercial printing is nearly extinct. Someone must still be, or at least still buying boxes of Fujifilm CA paper. I suspect that the EU and UK may be more likely to still print color. The slot processors are genius.I'm doing it. Was working with open trays at room temp, which wasn't too bad at all. Recently got an amazing deal on a nova slot processor so working on getting that set up now.



I hope to start up RA4 again in warmer weather, IF my backordered roll of favorite paper ever arrives. It's easy to get cut sheet CAII Fuji Crystal Archive RC paper, so there must be a fair amount of darkroom use.
But I'm waiting for more Fujiflex Supergloss, a deluxe product on polyester base, analogous to Cibachrome, but RA4 instead. Just this past week I made some more contact internegatives from old sheet film chromes for sake of this medium. But I also print color neg shots directly onto it.

I've got a nice Durst RCP 20 that I re-geared for RA4. I'm going to fire up for a 1st run. It's working properly, at least test run with water. 8x10 is adequate for most color work I do.Back in the day I used those daylight print drums. They worked fine, I learned to print color neg and slides with Cibachrome and whatever the Kodak process was called with them. I lucked out on a darkroom sale a few years ago that had a Durst Printo machine thrown in. Brought it back to life, so much easier than the drums once it’s set up. Bought a Beseler 16 roller transport dry to dry machine from a member here a couple of years later. I am really happy we can still get RA 4 materials, it’s wet darkroom for me- no scanning, photoshop, etc.
I've got a nice Durst RCP 20 that I re-geared for RA4. I'm going to fire up for a 1st run. It's working properly, at least test run with water. 8x10 is adequate for most color work I do.
That's quite the setup for cutting down roll paper. I've got a couple Doran 20x24 tubes. I still use Kodak machines for color prints up to 16x20. Means working in the dark, but requires zero effort to get going and clean up. I have several tubes, the first one I bought when Dick Nixon was in his first term as president.I mostly do drums for larger sized prints and have an RCP20 up and running for RA4 for anything 8x10 and smaller.
View attachment 294135
For the daylight drums, I have Cibachrome x4, Unicolor x7 , Patterson x3 and a couple of Unicolor roller bases, I also have a 16x20 Mitchell color canoe, which I have tried but I need new filters for my Thomas Duplex Safelight before I can use it without having a 'blueing' effect on the color paper.
View attachment 294115 View attachment 294116
I have a few rolls of 20", 30" and 40" wide color paper in Kodak Endura and Fuji Maxima (in the freezer) that I cut down for use on a special built table. I do all of the cutting in the complete dark and can handle rolls up to 51 inches wide. Kinda takes up the dry area of my small basement darkroom, so I like to get all of my cutting done in a session and pack this setup away.
View attachment 294134
And here is a quick shot of one of the colour prints I did from a 35mm Kodak Gold 200 negative as a 16x20inch print. Yes there is a bit of a green cast to this one, but this one is on really expired Kodak Endura
View attachment 294136

I have seen your posts with those old Kodak machines, and they look really cool, never seen one for sale in these parts... I have no trouble fumbling my way around in the dark, so I think I'd like that style of machine.Kodak machines for color prints up to 16x20
I just came out of my darkroom. I finally dialed in my filter pack. Used my little Durst RCP 20 for the first time, worked great. I think a slot processor for amateurs, small prints, make a lot of sense easy to replenish etc.
Just for fun I turned on all my Thomas safelights, equipped with the DUC filters. 5 minutes was enough to produce fogged prints. Key is one safelight, not four, and distance/ time.
I have some toy IR "binoculars" I use for loading film reels (spirals) I have put black electrical tape over the stronger LEDs.Isn't 5 min quite long? I have noticed that the strong IR LEDs in my night vision set fogs the paper rather quickly. FP4+ doesn't seem to be quite as sensitive to it. The IR light is quite on the near end of IR, though. I can see a dark red emitting from them. I bought them from a link in a photo forum. I believe LF photo forum. Supposedly some film lab in the US is using them.
I'm using a Jobo Color light. It has a diamond shaped array of orange LED inside. I had to open it up to resolder the capacitor inside. It has two filters, one for Kodak colour paper, i.e. RA4. One for Agfa, which is more a greenish filter. It points to the Nova at a distance of about one metre, and I switch it on after exposure. A few seconds in the dim light doesn't seem to do anything. It is bright on reflective surfaces, like the floor section of the light cone. but only contrast/silhouette like vision is possible.
That is ok, because the Nova is made from dark acrylic, while the slot walls inside are white plastic. Above the the fill level the slot walls reflect the light that hits the top of the processor at a flat angle. I can see the slots and the raised paper good enough to drain it before moving it into the next slot. And frankly, I think I could switch on the room light once it is in the stop bath, but I wait until the paper is in the blix.
I can do the same in the dark, but need my fingertips for vision. Gloves highly recommended in any case.

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